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WASHINGTON,
D.C., June 23, 2004 - According to a report issued today by a special
American Bar Association commission, America's criminal justice
systems rely too heavily on incarceration and need to consider more
effective alternatives.
"For more
than 20 years, we have gotten tougher on crime," said ABA President
Dennis W. Archer. "Now we need to get smarter. We can no longer
sit by as more and more people-particularly in minority communities-are
sent away for longer and longer periods of time while we make it
more and more difficult for them to return to society after they
serve their time. The system is broken. We need to fix it."
The recommendations,
which do not reflect ABA policy, will be considered by the ABA House
of Delegates for adoption as policy at its Annual Meeting in Atlanta,
August 9 and 10.
Archer today
joined Stephen Saltzburg, chair of the ABA Justice Kennedy Commission,
in presenting the commission's recommendations to U.S. Supreme Court
Justice Anthony M. Kennedy.
The recommendations,
the result of a nearly year-long review of issues confronting state
and federal criminal justice systems, address four primary sets
of issues: sentencing and incarceration issues, racial and ethnic
disparities in criminal justice systems, prison conditions and prisoner
reentry issues, and pardons and clemency processes.
The commission
noted that the United States imprisons more people than any other
country in the world. With more than 2.1 million people behind bars,
and some 650,000 set to be released this year, the commission urged
jurisdictions to invest in programs that help inmates return to
communities, provide alternatives to incarceration for offenders
who would benefit from substance abuse and mental illness programs,
and help eradicate the disproportionate impact "tough on crime"
laws have on minorities. The commission also called on Congress
to repeal mandatory minimum sentences.
"These
recommendations are intended to make our criminal justice systems
more effective and to utilize our limited resources more efficiently,"
said Saltzburg. "For too long we have focused almost exclusively
on locking up criminals. We also need to look at the other side
of the coin: what happens when they get out. We have to remember
that roughly 95 percent of the people we lock up eventually get
out. Our communities will be safer and our corrections budgets less
strained if we better prepared inmates to successfully reenter society
without returning to a life of crime."
The commission
noted that about one-third of the more than 650,000 inmates who
will be released this year can be expected to return to prison.
Many of its recommendations are intended to help jurisdictions find
ways to reduce the recidivism rate. One method, the commission noted,
is for Congress and state legislatures to eliminate unnecessary
legal barriers that make it difficult for some to become productive
members of society. People with drug convictions-even minor possession
charges, for example-are permanently ineligible for federal student
loans, housing assistance or public assistance.
The commission
also called on Congress to repeal mandatory minimum sentences, particularly
with respect to drug crimes. "Mandatory minimum sentences tend
to be tough on the wrong people," said Saltzburg. The commission's
report notes that the average federal drug trafficking sentence
was 72.7 months in 2001. By comparison, the average federal manslaughter
sentence was 34.3 months, the average assault sentence was 37.7
months, and the average sexual abuse sentence was 65.2 months.
For minorities
the situation is even more striking. The commission noted that an
African American male born in 2004 has a 1 in 3 chance of being
incarcerated sometime during his lifetime, compared to a 1 in 6
chance for a Latino male and a 1 in 17 chance for a white male.
Nationwide about 10 percent of African American men in their mid-to-late
20s are behind bars. In some cities more than half of young African-American
men are under the supervision of the criminal justice system.
The commission
recommended numerous steps that jurisdictions across the country
can take to address those problems. Among the highlights are proposals
to:
- repeal mandatory
minimum sentences;
- study and
fund alternatives to incarceration for offenders who may benefit
from treatment for substance abuse and mental illness
- develop and
implement policies and procedures to combat racial and ethnic
profiling;
- implement
prison policies and programs that, from the beginning of incarceration,
assist prisoners in preparing to reenter society by providing,
for example, substance abuse treatment, educational and job training
opportunities, and mental health counseling and services;
- identify
and remove unnecessary legal barriers that prevent released inmates
from successfully reentering society;
- establish
community partnerships that include corrections and police officers,
prosecutors, and community representatives committed to promoting
successful reentry into the community and that measure their performance
by the overall success of reentry;
- expand the
use of executive clemency to reduce sentences, as well as other
processes by which persons who have served their sentences can
request a pardon, restoration of legal rights and relief from
collateral disabilities.
- establish
criminal justice racial and ethnic task forces to study and make
recommendations concerning racial and ethnic disparity in the
various stages of the criminal justice process; and
- establish
reentry clinics in law schools in which students assist individuals
who have been imprisoned and are seeking to reestablish themselves
in the community, regain legal rights, or remove collateral disabilities
Archer formed the ABA Justice Kennedy Commission in October 2003
to address the "inadequacies - and the injustices - in our
prison and correctional systems" identified by Justice Kennedy
in his speech to the 2003 ABA Annual Meeting in San Francisco. In
the months since, the commission has held public hearings in Washington,
D.C., San Antonio, and Sacramento, Calif. During those hearings
the commission heard testimony from more than 75 judges, prosecutors,
defense lawyers, corrections officials, state and federal sentencing
commissioners, former inmates, victims advocacy groups, and law
enforcement officials.
For more information
on the ABA Justice Kennedy Commission or a complete set of the commission's
draft recommendations, visit the ABA Web site at www.abanews.org.
With more than
400,000 members, the American Bar Association is the largest voluntary
professional membership organization in the world. As the national
voice of the legal profession, the ABA works to improve the administration
of justice, promotes programs that assist lawyers and judges in
their work, accredits law schools, provides continuing legal education,
and works to build public understanding around the world of the
importance of the rule of law in a democratic society.
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