This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
--------------51A5234A2791
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
The Wall is substantial, but it is not an immovable object. The cracks are propagating.
--------------51A5234A2791
Content-Type: message/rfc822 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Content-Disposition: inline
Return-Path: <MGreer@mapinc.org>
Received: from maxwell.kumo.com (root@kumo.com [198.161.199.205])
by grace.speakeasy.org (8.9.1/8.9.1) with ESMTP id LAA19443 for <kmo@speakeasy.org>; Sat, 13 Mar 1999 11:51:41 -0800 Received: from out4.ibm.net (out4.ibm.net [165.87.194.239]) by maxwell.kumo.com (8.9.1/8.9.1) with ESMTP id MAA04825 for <kmo@c-realm.com>; Sat, 13 Mar 1999 12:52:50 -0700Received: from cag (slip166-72-150-181.ca.us.ibm.net [166.72.150.181]) by out4.ibm.net (8.8.5/8.6.9) with SMTP id SAA36204; Sat, 13 Mar 1999 18:48:22 GMT
Message-Id: <4.1.19990313102211.00c054b0@pop1.ibm.net> Message-Id: <4.1.19990313102211.00c054b0@pop1.ibm.net> Message-Id: <4.1.19990313102211.00c054b0@pop1.ibm.net> Message-Id: <4.1.19990313102211.00c054b0@pop1.ibm.net>X-Sender: Mgreer3@pop1.ibm.net
DrugSense FOCUS Alert #100!!! Write A letter to celebrate our 100th FOCUS. Your letter could be the one to put us over $1.5 million in ad value see: http://www.mapinc.org/lte/
Wall Street Journal actually issues a call for drug policy reform
TO SUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE, DONATE, VOLUNTEER TO HELP OR UPDATE YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS PLEASE SEE THE INFORMATION AT THE BOTTOM OF THIS FOCUS ALERT
*********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************
DrugSense FOCUS Alert #100 Saturday March 13, 1999
The Wall Street Journal has been one of the most outspoken supporters of zero tolerance drug prohibition in the nation. In the past, common sense calls for reform have been quickly labeled as "legalization" efforts.
This week the Journal printed an op-ed piece by an academic suggesting a repeal of mandatory minimums for drug offenders, along with other reforms to stop the outrageous growth of the U.S. prison population (see below). Even more astonishing, the author generally supports the idea of law and order at any cost.
Let's encourage the Journal to print more challenges to standard drug war dogma, and tell other drug warriors that it's okay to "come out" in support of reform before the prison system spins further out of control.
Thanks for your effort and support.
WRITE A LETTER TODAY It's not what others do it's what YOU do ***************************************************************************
PLEASE SEND US A COPY OF YOUR LETTER OR TELL US WHAT YOU DID ( Letter, Phone, fax etc.)
Please post a copy your letter or report your action to the MAPTalk list if you are subscribed, or by E-mailing a copy directly to MGreer@mapinc.org Your letter will then be forwarded to the list with so others can learn from your efforts and be motivated to follow suit
This is VERY IMPORTANT as it is the only way we have of gauging our impact and effectiveness.
CONTACT INFO
The Wall Street Journal
200 Liberty Street
New York, NY 10281
212 416-2000
Contact: letter.editor@edit.wsj.com
Website: http://www.wsj.com/
EXTRA CREDIT - (Optional - Other creative ideas for increasing participation encouraged)
Send your letter to any or all of the newspapers in your state using the NEW
DrugSense MEDIA EMAIL DATABASE. Simply go to the website below and select your
state or other criteria and presto a list of media contacts complete with
names
of the media organization will be presented or E-mailed to you.
http://www.mapinc.org/resource/email.htm
NOTE: For best possibilities of getting published DO NOT BCC: to many
papers at
once. This will practically insure that you are not published.
If your intention is the widest distribution of your thoughts in the least amount of time BCC may be acceptable in rare instances but is really a bad habit and considered bad form by most media contacts.
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 1999
Two Million Prisoners Are Enough
BY John J. DiIulio Jr..
Violent crime has dropped 21% since 1993, and property crime is at a post
l973 low. No one really knows which demographic economic or other factors
explain what fraction of the decrease in crime. But recent studies confirm
that increased incarceration has helped to cut crime. Yet the same research
also suggests that the nation has "maxed out" on the public safety value of
incarceration.
Until recently, increased incarceration has improved public safety. But as America's incarcerated population approaches two million the value of imprisonment is a portrait in the law of rapidly diminishing returns. The Justice system is becoming less capable of distributing sanctions and supervision rationally., especially where drug offenders are concerned. It's time for policy makers to change focus aiming for zero prison growth. Current laws put too many nonviolent drug offenders in prison. A 1997 study by: Harvard economist Anne Morrison Piehl found that in Massachusetts about half of recently incarcerated drug offenders had previously been charged and a third had previously been convicted of a violent offense. But most of the state's drug offenders had no known record of violence while half its probation population consisted of violent felons.
Drug Only Offenders
New York state is another example. Since 1973 The Rockefeller laws have
landed legions of nonviolent drug offenders in the state prisons for
mandatory terms ranging from 15 years to life. I have been calling for the
repeal of the Rockefeller laws since 1995 and the case for repeal Is now
stronger than ever. Based on the results of a forthcoming Manhattan
Institute study by Ms. Piehl criminologist Bert Useem of the University of
New Mexico and me, It appears that at least a quarter of recent admissions
to the state's prisons are "drug only offenders," meaning felons whose only
crimes detected or undetected have been low level nonviolent drug offenses.
And we were able to derive similar drug only estimates for several other
state prison systems.
In 1997 as crime continued to decline the prison population grew by 5.2%. Spending on correctional institutions is crowding out spending on other proven crime reduction strategies including improved policing. A study released last month by the Rockefeller Institute of Government found that In 1913 52% of total U.S. criminal justice spending went to police 28% to corrections. By 1995 43% went to police.and 37% to corrections. Policy makers at all levels of government should dedicate themselves to further public safety gains while keeping the prison population around two million and even aiming to reduce it over the next decade. The path to zero prison growth can be paved by five policy steps:
• Repeal mandatory minimum drug laws release drug only offenders and mandate drug treatment both behind bars and in the community. Between 1980 and 1994, the incarceration rate for drug arrests increased to 80 per 1 000 arrests from 19. Continued increases in drug incarceration will yield little or no public safety value. Recent studies by Yale psychiatrist Sally Satel and UCLA criminologist Mark A.R. Kleiman indicate that community based coerced abstinence programs tend to succeed where other approaches fall. The Center for Alcohol and Substance Abuse has produced persuasive data on the promise of specialized drug courts. The National Institute for Healthcare Research has collected reams of reliable data about the efficacy of certain faith based substance abuse programs.
• Reinvent and reinvest in probation and parole. Currently we spend next to nothing on community based corrections. We get what we pay for. About a third of all people arrested for violent crimes are on probation parole or pretrial release at the time of their arrest. A recent study of Texas probationers found that three years after receiving probation. 44% of first time violent offenders with a prior felony history had returned to prison. Likewise a 1996 New York state study found that within three years of their release. 43% of state prison inmates released between 1985 and 1992 had returned to prison half for a new crime half for parole violations.
Most of what ails probation and parole can be fixed by cutting officer caseloads and spending more on performance driven programs that take supervision seriously and put public safety first.
Boston's Deputy Probation Commissioner Ronald Corbett has spearheaded a nine year effort to enter Into crime cutting partnerships with police community leaders and clergy. Early on the effort resulting in a quadrupling in the number of probationers prosecuted for violating the terms of their conditional release. Even though few of those violations resulted In Incarceration would be street felons got the message and Boston has since had only four gun related youth homicides. Between 1991 and 1997 the number of probation and parole agents In Michigan Increased by more than hall and the aver age number of offenders supervised by each agent fell to 63 from 92. Former Michigan Director of Corrections Kenneth McGinnis explains that these changes resulted In an increase of more than 55% in the number of parolees charged with violating the terms of their release. But over six years Michigan prison admissions resulting from probation and parole violations grew by only 1.6% demonstrating Mr. McGinnis says that "intensive supervision of offenders in community programs can be accomplished without a disastrous impact on prison growth."
• Stop federalizing crime policy and modify federal sentencing guidelines
Washington's role in crime control has expanded dramatically since 1968.
But the results have been mixed at best. Too often Congress twists
reasonable ideas developed by local law enforcement (the need to restrain
repeat violent offenders regardless of their age) into grotesque federal
policies (last year's defeated plan to remove federal restrictions on
incarcerating Juveniles with adults).
Earlier this year an American Bar Association report led by former Attorney
General Edwin Meese 111 detailed the dangers of further federalizing crime
policy. Federal lawmakers should heed the Meese report and study "Fear of
Judging" a just published book by former federal prosecutor Kate Stith and
Judge Jose A. Cabranes who make a solid case for reforming federal
sentencing procedures. Such changes would undoubtedly reduce the number of
drug only offenders In federal prisons by tens of thousands.
• Study and promote faith based crime prevention and restorative justice.
Scientific studies testify to the efficacy of faith-based efforts. In a
1998 report issued by the Manhattan Institute ciminologist Byron R.
Johnson of Vanderbilt University summarized the results of a systematic
review of more than 400 studies testing the relationship between all sorts
of religious influences (churchgoing being just one) and crime and
delinquency. The report echoed
the conclusion of a study published in 1995 in the journal Criminology
namely, that most of the best available empirical evidence suggests that
religion significantly reduces crime and delinquency.
The remarkable leaders and programs behind these findings know one God but
many religions and ideologies. The liberal New York Theological Seminary
recently launched an antiviolence youth outreach program started by exoffender
graduates of its historic Sing Sing education ministry advised by
leaders of the American I Can program directed by former football star Jim
Brown and supported financially by both Republican Gov. George Pataki and
the Ford Foundation. The Prison Fellowship Ministry led by Watergate
offender Charles Colson a religious conservative recently launched an
initiative dedicated to ministering to the spiritual and material needs of
prisonen ex prisoners. and their families including the over one million
youngsters In this country who have one or both parents in prison or jail.
The National Ten Point Leadership Foundation led by Rev. Eugene F. Rivers
III of Boston, a former Philadelphia gang member has put responsible adults
in the lives of thousands of at risk youths and helped to spark ecumenical
interfaith and public private partnerships dedicated to reducing violence
in cities all across the country.
These faith based anti-crime programs and a growing number of secular ones
as well are predicated upon the concept of “restorative justice," according
to which the ultimate purpose of the criminal law is to restore the
"shalom" or peace that crime robs from victims perpetrators and com
munities alike. Restorative justice returns America to the ethical
understanding of those who founded the American penitentiary to reclaim
public order and repair broken hearts. lives and communities on both sides
of the walls.
• Redouble efforts at juvenile crime prevention. I have argued before and I
continue to believe that demographic trends will exert strong upward
pressure on crime rates In the years just ahead unless we take strong steps
to prevent juvenile crime.
Most experts seem comforted that only a fifth of the more than 1.5 million
annual delinquency cases in the mid 1990s involved violent crimes and
reassured by statistics showing that barely 0.1% of all juvenile arrests
were for homicide. But In Philadelphia and many other cities in the mid
1990s homicide was the leading cause of death for people age 13 to 21.
Rosy statistics cannot mask the travesty of some 2,000 juvenile committed
homicides a year a death toll that would have been higher were it not for
vast post 1990 improvements in emergency medical technology. The statistics
cannot hide the reality that an estimated six out of 10 of the most serious
youth offenders are never caught.
Horrific Peak
Juvenile crime has declined from its horrific peak in 1994 but with a
record 70.2 million juveniles. In the population the number of 14 to 17
year olds will be 20% greater in 2005 than It was In 1996. By 2006 .
America will be home to some 30 million teenagers, the largest number since
1975. Over the next decade, all but five states will experience significant
growth in the number of young males entering their most crime prone years.
For all the good news about crime and other social indicators too many of
America's children are still growing up abused. (over a million
substantiated cases a year) impoverished (at least 16%) without a father In
the home (at least 40%) or subject to other influences that researchers
have consistently found are associated with crime and delinquency.
In 1997, researchers at the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics estimated
that if present incarceration rates were to remain constant 5% of Americans
would be imprisoned during their lifetimes (the rates are 16.2% for blacks
9.4% for Hispanics and 2.5% for whites) . But the rates need not remain
constant nor should they. Zero prison growth is possible. In the end,
whether or not we achieve this goal will be a profound measure not merely
of how nimble we are when it comes to managing public safety cost
effectively but also of how decent we are despite our many differences when
it came to loving all God's children unconditionally including all those in
criminal custody.
Mr. DiIulio is a professor of public policy at Princeton University and a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.
ADDITIONAL INFO to help you in your letter writing efforts
3 Tips for Letter Writers http://www.mapinc.org/3tips.htm
Letter Writers Style Guide http://www.mapinc.org/style.htm
SAMPLE LETTER (SENT)
To the editor of the Wall Street Journal:
Thank you for printing John J. DiIulio Jr.'s call to repeal mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenders, along with other suggested reforms to stop the insane growth of the U.S. prison population ("Two Million Prisoners Are Enough," March 12).
The national incarceration binge we've been on for more than decade has done nothing but make the illegal drug business more profitable. And while reports of crime have gone down in the past few years, many believe the drop has had more to do with economic growth than prison growth.
When the economy slows down, and tax revenues drop at every level of government, we will begin to pay a bigger portion of our taxes to make sure that crack users who tried to support their habits by selling a few grams are serving multi-year sentences. When budgets become tighter, it will make even less sense for the nation to spend as much or more on keeping non-violent offenders locked up than we spend on police work to assist people who have actually suffered violence or the loss of personal property. DiIulio is right to call for the change in priorities now.
Of course, other massive reforms are needed in drug policy. Many, like needle exchanges, offer economic and humanitarian benefits similar to the repeal of mandatory minimums. And, while DiIulio has tossed some fairly meaty bones to libertarians who have watched with dismay as social conservatives employ brute force in an attempt to change personal behavior, he still can't seem to completely break his habit. "Coerced abstinence programs" may sound kinder and gentler than prison terms, but coercion is coercion, and unless someone has victimized someone else, it is not appropriate.
Still, I applaud DiIulio and the Wall Street Journal for at least opening up a constructive dialog. Let's hear more.
Stephen Young
(contact info)
IMPORTANT: Always include your address and telephone number.
Prepared by Steve Young <theyoungfamily@worldnet.att.net> DrugSense FOCUS Alert Specialist
TO SUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE, OR UPDATE YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS:
Please utilize the following URLs
http://www.drugsense.org/hurry.htm
http://www.drugsense.org/unsub.htm
We wish to thank all our contributors, editors, Newshawks and letter writing activists.
NOTICE:
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.
REMINDER:
Please help us help reform. Send any news articles you find on any drug related issue to editor@mapinc.org
===
NOW YOU CAN DONATE TO DRUGSENSE ONLINE AND IT'S TAX DEDUCTIBLE
DrugSense provides many services to at no charge BUT THEY ARE NOT FREE TO PRODUCE.
We incur many costs in creating our many and varied services. If you
are able to help by contributing to the DrugSense effort visit our
convenient donation web site at
http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
-OR-
Mail in your contribution. Make checks payable to MAP Inc. send your
contribution to:
The Media Awareness Project (MAP) Inc.
d/b/a DrugSense
PO Box 651
Porterville,
CA 93258
(800) 266 5759
MGreer@mapinc.org
http://www.mapinc.org/
http://www.drugsense.org/
--------------51A5234A2791--