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- Date sent: Sun, 26 May 1996 22:42:16 -0700
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- Alternatives.
- By Robert W. Mallett
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- Today, more than ever before in the history of our penal system, our people are being sent
- to prisons all across the United States for such offenses as drug possession, traffic
- violations and other minor scrapes with the law. Apparently the American public has decided
- by popular vote that incarceration is the cure all for our countries complex crime problems.
- However, now we are facing prison overcrowding like never before in the history of The
- United States. I believe we need to look at these problems closer and analyze them in a
- more rational sense. I do not believe that incarceration is the answer to all our problems
- when it comes the criminals in our society. We are wasting billions of dollars on new
- prisons all across the nation. Is it time we look to alternatives to the "lock em up and
- throw away the key" attitude that plagues middle class America? I sincerely believe so.
- No one really knows the true reasons why crime occurs. The oldest theory, based on theology
- and ethics, is that people who commit to crimes are perverse, and do it deliberately, or
- because the devil made them do it. Although that idea has long since been discarded by
- modern criminologists, it persists among uninformed people and provides the rational for
- the harsh punishments and laws that are being adopted by the people all across the nation.
- As the eighteenth century rolled around we began to look at scientific reasons why crime
- was committed. At the end of the eighteenth century German physician Franz Joseph Gall had
- advanced that skull structure had a profound effect on the likelihood of criminality1
- His theory was very popular until the nineteenth century when it was discarded as absurd.
- There have been several different theories on what makes a man not conform to public laws
- since that time. Lombroso, an Italian criminologist, asserted that there is a correlation
- between criminals and Mongoloids, which showed some validity until the 20th century when
- Charles Goring, a British criminologist, did a study on incarcerated and unincarcerated
- and found no correlation at all thus disproving Lombroso's theory2. Lombroso's theory also
- could have been attributed to the fact that people with socially unappealing looks tend to
- be looked down upon from the general public, thus having less opportunities in the
- community. Although many brilliant men have conceived a vast array of different theories on
- why people deviate from societies norms, we must pay attention to the elements that have
- been around since crime itself, which is mental illness and poverty. There are a great many
- people in society that don't hold the tools necessary to decipher between right and wrong.
- There are sociopaths psychopaths, and people that just are not very intelligent for a
- variety of different reasons. We also have a great many people that are at a disadvantage
- in our ultra high tech and extremely competitive society. These people, I believe, are
- sometimes forced in to a life of crime because of what I call "A will to survive." They are
- not inherently evil like middle class America tends to think, they are simply lacking the
- social structure, education and guidance needed by all human beings. And these are the
- Americans that are filling up our prisons as you read this. Now that we have a better
- understanding of why people commit to crimes, I think it only proper we compare how we have
- dealt with these people we refer to as "vermin" throughout U.S. history. It is common
- knowledge that virtually every crime in early history was punishable by death, but since
- that time our punishment ideals have evolved. In America, the idea of prisons was spurred
- by the deep religious beliefs of English Quaker, William Penn.3 Penn abolished the penalty
- of death for most crimes in the 1600's, substituting imprisonment as a punishment. Then in
- 1718 the British Government compelled the colonists to reinstate the penalty of death,
- however, shortly after independence, the Pennsylvania Legislature replaced capitol
- punishment with imprisonment as the primary punishment for vermin, or criminals. The Walnut
- Street Gaol was the first prison ever built in America. By the middle of the nineteenth
- century, all most all the states had built them. Eventually there were two types of prisons.
- One type used at a New York prison called The Auburn State Prison allowed prisoners to work
- together all day long , but in absolute silence. At night they were confined to their cell
- with nothing but a bible. If caught communicating in any way, they were punished severely.
- The other type of prison held it's inmates in absolute solitary confinement. This prison was
- called Cherry Hill. There were massive debates erupting between the proponents of the two
- types of prisons. Those who favored the Cherry Hill model of complete isolation thought that
- being locked down in a room with nothing to do would somehow reform a criminal, but in
- reality, it did nothing but drive most inmates mad. The Auburn State prison was criticized
- as being virtual slavery, because the criminals incarcerated were put to work for private
- business owners who had contracted with the state for labor, thus bringing in enormous
- profits for the state and the private business owners.4 Marx would have loved that huh?
- Talk about class conflict! As you can see, the primary concern for these institutions was
- to confine inmates for the duration of their prison term. Thus, the facilities were just
- massive institutions filled with men and women, sane and insane, young and old. They were
- human warehouses. By mid-nineteenth century, penologists began to argue that the prisoners
- could and should be rehabilitated while incarcerated. In 1870, The American Correctional
- Association met for the first time in Cincinnati, Ohio and persuaded congress to adopt a
- set of principals for the corrections institutions based on goals of rehabilitation rather
- than punishment. Shortly after those principals were set, we started to see work camps,
- prison industry, and things of that nature. The inmates were busy all the time in different
- areas of work provided by the prisons. They learned new trades and skills that would help
- them cope with society when they were released from prison. Prison was a big industry, and
- the money earned from the labor went to pay for the facilities in which they lived. Prison
- officials set up programs that allowed family visitation to keep the prisoners in close ties
- with there family and as a result, the madness that inflicted so many inmates all but
- disappeared. Prison operations were going along great until the Hawes-Cooper Act in 1929,
- which put a fast halt to prison made goods and services. Thus, the prisoners were once
- again left with idle time. Now we shall have a glance at the current prison situation.
- Beginning with the Reagan era and his "war on crime" the state and federal prisons have
- literally been packed beyond capacity with convicted men and women. The crimes committed by
- these people are sometimes ruthless and violent as well as petty and small. None the less,
- our prisons are full. And with legislature making new criminal laws each session, there is
- no apparent end in sight. According to the Department of Justice, as of June 30th, 1995,
- there were an estimated 1,550,000 adults incarcerated for one thing or another, which is a
- 300% increase over the amount incarcerated in 1980. Of that amount, there were 25%
- incarcerated for violation of drug laws which equals to over 388,000 people. Whether people
- realize it or not, there are ripple effects from the massive incarcerations that are going
- on. Let us think about the children of all those prisoners. It's been proved that being in
- prison has a detrimental effect on the prisoners ability to earn money. If the prisoner is
- left with no means to earn money for his family, then who will end up footing the bill for
- the children's medical expenses, food, clothing, and home? My guess is that the local
- welfare department will have a helping hand ready. The countries state prisons have seen a
- tremendous 1055% increase in drug inmates as apposed to a small 55% increase in violent
- offenders. We currently have an approximated 2.7% of America's men and women either in
- jail or under some type of penal supervision as I write this. The federal prisons now hold
- over 96,000 people, of that there are over 60% incarcerated for drug violations. The bill
- for these men and women to be incarcerated is coming in at over 9 billion dollars a year. As
- a result of all these people being locked up, most people agree that it is no harder to find
- drugs now than it was in the early 80's when the Federal and local governments started the
- crusade against drugs. It just doesn't make sense to keep housing all these men and women
- for a petty little thing like drugs. The street level drug dealer can be easily replaced by
- the next guy that loses his job. It would be much more beneficial to put a stop to all the
- new prisons construction and used the funds to pay out military forces to stop the flow of
- drugs into the United States. God knows that cocaine is not produced in America, it is
- produced in Bolivia, Peru, and Central America. We have people like Juan Garcia Abrego,
- who smuggle thousands of tins of cocaine into the U.S. every year, yet we still punish our
- own people for possessing or selling small amounts. I believe the Government should be held
- responsible. We elect these great men and women to oversee the safety of our United States,
- and they can't even keep the drugs out. It's important to try and see these circumstances in
- a different light. If our Government is so concerned with the well being of the people,
- then the first order of business should be to keep or children safe from the terrible
- effects of drugs in our society. Instead, they make laws to punish our own people. In
- conclusion, I will never believe that with all the technology we possess, we are unable to
- stop the flow. Think about it, we can stop an incoming missile flying hundreds of miles an
- hour high above, but we can't stop the drugs. Meanwhile, the middle class citizen keeps
- after the Government for some kind of control and they decide to people of the United
- States. Not the Bolivians or Central Americans. I hate drugs and what they are doing to our
- children. We can try to teach our children that drugs are bad, and we can keep throwing
- anyone that has contact with drugs in prison, but what is going to happen in the end?
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- 1 Erickson, Tortsen. The Reformers; An Historical Survey of Pioneer Experiments in The
- Treatment of criminals Elsivier 1976 2 3 McElvey, Blake. American Prisons; A History of
- Good Intentions. Patterson, Smith,2nd ed., 1977
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- 4 Mitford, Jessica. Kind and Usual Punishment; The Prison Business. Knopf, 1973. Vintage,
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