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- <text id=89TT2393>
- <link 89TT2726>
- <link 89TT1426>
- <title>
- Sep. 11, 1989: Doing The Crime, Not The Time
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Sep. 11, 1989 The Lonely War:Drugs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ETHICS, Page 81
- Doing the Crime, Not the Time
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Creative sentences: fair punishment or a dodge for the
- privileged?
- </p>
- <p> In the morning, dentist Michael Koplik strolls from his
- Park Avenue apartment to his New York City office. In his off
- hours, he mingles easily with other successful Manhattanites.
- In short, little has changed for Koplik, 68, since he was
- sentenced in July for sexually abusing a heavily sedated female
- patient. The reason: instead of serving a career-destroying jail
- term, Koplik was ordered to provide free treatment for six AIDS
- patients who had been shunned by other dentists.
- </p>
- <p> Similarly lenient alternative sentences were handed down in
- two widely publicized cases this summer. Convicted in July for
- his role in the Iran-contra affair, Lieut. Colonel Oliver North
- was ordered to do 1,200 hours of community service for
- inner-city youths, fined $150,000 and given a two-year suspended
- sentence. A few weeks later, actor Rob Lowe cut a deal with
- Atlanta prosecutors to avoid charges of sexual exploitation of
- an underage girl. Instead of going to trial, Lowe will spend 20
- hours doing public service.
- </p>
- <p> The trend toward alternative, nonprison punishments has
- been sharply criticized by advocates of tougher measures. "With
- these types of sentences," says Gennaro Fischetti, a member of
- the New York State Crime Victims Board, "victims feel they have
- been betrayed by the system." Apart from victims' rights, such
- sentences raise a troubling ethical question: Is this a fair and
- effective way of dealing with crime, or just an elaborate
- subterfuge allowing well-to-do -- and often white -- defendants
- to avoid serving time behind bars? Is there a double standard
- of justice -- a kid glove for the privileged middle class and
- an iron fist for the others?
- </p>
- <p> Statistics suggest that there may be a two-tiered system.
- On the day North received his judicial wrist slap, roughly 2,200
- other convicted felons, the vast majority poor and minorities,
- were sentenced in American courtrooms; some 1,500 of them
- received prison terms ranging from one to five years. This sharp
- disparity has led some critics to deride the tailor-made
- punishments of North and his ilk as "boutique" or "designer"
- sentences.
- </p>
- <p> But the raw numbers do not tell the whole story. In the
- first place, many nonprison sentences are meted out for
- white-collar crimes, and these are less likely to be committed
- by minorities. Furthermore, observes Jerome Miller of the
- National Center on Institutions and Alternatives, creative
- sentencing may favor the well-to-do over the downtrodden, but
- that has been the nature of penal systems throughout history.
- Prisons everywhere tend to be populated by people on the lowest
- rung of the socioeconomic ladder.
- </p>
- <p> Many argue that there are good reasons not to ship every
- criminal off to a jail cell -- regardless of his class or
- color. New York Federal Judge Jack Weinstein contends that
- sentences for nonviolent criminals should help them get back on
- their feet, not knock them to the ground. "Very often the person
- has a job and a family," he says. "What you want to do is work
- with the healthy part, so that the person isn't utterly
- destroyed." Professor Monroe Freedman of Hofstra Law School says
- prison is no more than "graduate crime school. We virtually
- guarantee they'll come out worse than when they went in."
- William Genego, a professor at the University of Southern
- California Law Center, points out that alternative sentences are
- cheaper for taxpayers. Says he: "There's no reason to spend
- $10,000 (to jail a criminal) if you can spend $5,000 and
- accomplish the same objective."
- </p>
- <p> Prison overcrowding is another strong impetus for
- alternative sentences. With prisons jammed to the rafters in
- many states, jurists tend to sort out nonviolent criminals when
- they are considering creative sentences. Some of these
- punishments are neatly tied to the crime: bumper stickers that
- identify those convicted of drunken driving and long stays in
- rat-infested apartments for slumlords. In California criminals
- under house arrest are fitted with electronic sensors that
- enable authorities to monitor their whereabouts.
- </p>
- <p> Some critics refer to sentences that publicly identify the
- criminal as a wrongdoer as "scarlet letter" punishments. If
- rehabilitation, rather than pure retribution, is the goal,
- these punishments can boomerang. "The stigmatizing process can
- go too far," says Albert Alschuler, a law professor at the
- University of Chicago. "We make them outlaws, but we want to
- integrate them into society at some point."
- </p>
- <p> Other creative sentences seem to come precariously close to
- the constitutional prohibition against "cruel and unusual
- punishment." In July Michael Axsom of Columbus, Ind., was
- convicted of dealing cocaine, for which he could have drawn up
- to 20 years in jail. Instead Axsom, 28, was given a sentence
- that he describes as "kind of odd": a prohibition against
- getting married or having children for four years, in addition
- to concurrent house arrest and six years' probation.
- </p>
- <p> Professor Alan Dershowitz of Harvard law school notes that
- such sentences are particularly alluring for jurists who are
- seeking publicity. "Judges are best when they apply the law and
- worst when they try to win Nobel Prizes for creativity," he
- says. To keep punishments more uniform, the federal courts have
- adopted strict sentencing guidelines. But at the state level,
- creative sentencing will remain an alternative to a costly, and
- sometimes ineffectual, system of incarceration. Says
- Northwestern law school professor Stephen Presser: "A lot of
- people think that once you depart from mathematic equations,
- you're violating the most profound principles of justice. But
- the mansion of justice has many rooms."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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