Yes, Government Law Enforcement Keeps Screwing the Poor
Jesse Walker wisely wrote here the other day that "A Serious Anti-Poverty Agenda Has to Include Criminal Justice Reform." I reported in January on various instances in which the enforcement of petty laws involving the way we move ourselves and our vehicles through the world—and where we deposit them—can ruin the less-well-offs lives for very little good reason in my article "Petty Law Enforcement vs. the Poor."
One thing I learned in my research for that article from academics and workers in the field of poverty aid was that there was very little accumulated sociological knowledge about the true extent of this problem. Last week, the sometimes-good folk at NPR did an interestingly thorough journalistic look at one aspect of this whole issue: court costs.
While not revealing all the facts with social science precision, helps remind anyone who cares that if the government wants to make the lives of the poor less harsh, it can profitably check itself and do some things differently.
It relates sad anecdotes about how very minor infractions can lead to jail time if you don't pay the fines you were first hit with. And it stressed how in most states the government—despite all those taxes we pay—basically wants each offender to cover the costs of their own prosecution, including public defenders, incarcaration, parole supervison, even sometimes jury trials.
The nub of the problem:
The people most likely to face arrest and go through the courts are poor, says sociologist Alexes Harris, at the University of Washington. She's writing a book on these fees and the people who struggle to pay them.
"They tend to be people of color, African-Americans and Latinos," Harris says. "They tend to be high school dropouts, they tend to be people with mental illness, with substance abuse. So these are already very poor and marginalized people in our society, and then we impose these fiscal penalties to them and expect that they make regular payments, when in fact the vast majority are unable to do so."
Many fees can be waived for indigent defendants, but judges are more likely to put the poor on a more manageable payment plan.
Courts, however, will then sometimes tack on extra fees, penalties for missed payments and may even charge interest.
In Washington state, for example, there's 12 percent interest on costs in felony cases that accrues from the moment of judgment until all fines, fees, restitution and interest are paid off in full. As a result, it can be hard for someone who's poor to make that debt ever go away. One state commission found that the average amount in felony cases adds up to $2,500. If someone paid a typical amount — $10 a month — and never missed a payment, his debt would keep growing. After four years of faithful payments, the person would now owe $3,000.
Once you get trapped, often for the stupidest reasons, in this roundrobin of fines and rights and privileges being taken away with the failure to promptly pay them,
"There are a lot of things you can't do. A lot of jobs you can't apply for," says Todd Clear, who studies crime policy and is provost of Rutgers University, Newark. "Lots of benefits you can't apply for. If you have a license, a driver's license that needs to be renewed, you can't renew it. So what it means is you live your entire life under a cloud. In a very real sense, they drop out of the real society."
In one county, NPR found "about a quarter of the people who were in jail for misdemeanor offenses were there because they had failed to pay their court fines and fees."
Some macro-data on the problem:
The number of Americans with unpaid fines and fees is massive. In 2011, in Philadelphia alone, courts sent bills on unpaid debts dating back to the 1970s to more than 320,000 people — roughly 1 in 5 city residents. The median debt was around $4,500. And in New York City, there are 1.2 million outstanding warrants, many for unpaid court fines and fees.
The growth in the number of people who owe court-imposed monetary sanctions shows up in surveys by the U.S. Department of Justice, too: In 1991, 25 percent of prison inmates said they owed court-imposed costs, restitution, fines and fees. By 2004, the last time the Justice Department did the survey, that number climbed to about 66 percent.
Many of these are not statutory punishments for the crime but just fees charged as a matter of court and city and county government policy--because they think they need the money. It can be a substantial cash cow for them.
It again reminded me of my last day in court, for a traffic offense. (I was guilty as hell!) Every single other person there—every one!—was in court facing fines over a thousand and possible jail time over things that started with "minor" fines in the less than a hundred to few hundred level—fines that because of their wealth level they were unwilling or unable, or because of lack of general shit-togetherness didn't manage, to pay on time. It's a crummy situation.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
If every American had to sit through misdemeanor drug court, and see the money in fines and fees that judges slap on those poor bastards all day long, they just might consider ending the war on drugs.
they just might consider ending the war on drugs.
Now, tell us why you hate the children, mister!
Well, who is the easiest 'folks' to screw over? I mean, it's no fun to try screwing over people who might actually be able and willing to defend themselves. It would be like playing army guy and have people around who shoot back. What's fun about that?
OT: Truecrypt shuttered.
Questions arise as to why. Conspiracies abound, since audit found no back-door security holes the NSA could exploit.
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/truec.....ng-1450467
At your link An unstoppable ad with spiderman delivering mail for the US postal service nearly crashed my browser.
THANKS A LOT PAUL.
Autoplay BS should be enough to shutter news sites.
It's 2014, people! We deserve better!
Criminality, and the unnameable thing that is correlated with it, is also correlated with poverty.
zzzzz
I once asked a lawyer buddy "Has anyone ever tried arguing that they cannot receive a fair trial or hearing when the court stands to gain financially from their conviction?"
He scratched his head and said that as far as he knows that had never been tried.
Does anyone here know anything about that?
Cleveland police officer indicted in fatal shooting after chase
[...]
A grand jury indicted Michael Brelo on two counts of manslaughter for his involvement in the November 2012 shooting deaths of Timothy Russell and Malissa Williams after Russell fled a traffic stop, according to Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Tim McGinty.
Brelo was one of the 104 officers involved in the chase that ensued with Russell at speeds that reached 110 miles per hour (177 km per hour).
When the 25-minute chase ended in a school parking lot, Brelo climbed on top of Russell's car and fired 15 rounds into the 1979 Chevy after other officers stopped firing, investigators said.
[...]
The grand jury also indicted five police department supervisors for dereliction of duty, a misdemeanor.
Nine Cleveland police department supervisors were suspended, two demoted and one was fired because of the way they handled the incident. Of the officers involved in the chase, 63 were suspended for a total of 178 days. The longest suspension was 10 days.
[...]
----
If Officer Brelo did not execute Russel & Williams, all those other cops wouldn't have suffered. I guess that's why the DA presented the case to the grand jury in such a manner that it actually returned true bills.
The municipal court systems have turned into cash cows. I live in a Montana city (small by national norms) and was pulled over for not coming to a complete stop which was bogus but the ticket was like 50 bucks.
So I show up at the clerk of court and say I'll just pay the fine rather than going before the JoP. I was astounded that the 50 buck turned into 125 bucks with fucking fees. The people here elected a fucking cunt as a municipal judge who ran on collecting more delinquent fees, I can only imagine the people doing jail time and missing work to feed this system. The progs around here control elected offices and jerk off all the time about social justice. They are too fucking stupid to realize they are hosing the down and out with this bullshit. I had the coin to take the hit for the 75 bucks even though I was pissed, I imagine a lot of others are fucked over because of the bureaucratic leeches.
The courts only want to help you help yourself. And if they can help themselves by helping you, everybody wins.