Overcrowded: The Messy Politics of California's Prison Crisis
"A prison that deprives prisoners of basic sustenance, including adequate medical care, is incompatible with the concept of human dignity and has no place in civilized society," wrote Justice Anthony Kennedy for the majority in a Supreme Court ruling against Governor Jerry Brown and the state of California in the 2011 case Brown v. Plata.
The Supreme Court had just affirmed what lower courts had been telling California for decades: The prisons are too crowded. It's time to fix the problem.
Three years later, after several extensions asked for and granted, California's government has managed to reduce the prison population, but not by enough to meet the 137.5 percent of occupational capacity target set by the courts. But they are close enough, at 140 percent, to give Gov. Brown the confidence to declare victory.
"The prison emergency is over in California," Brown said at a press conference in 2013. "It is now time to return the control of our prison system to California."
Brown's strategy to combat overcrowding has been twofold: Send inmates to out-of-state and/or private prisons, and shift low-level offenders down to county jails. Predictably, this latter strategy, called "realignment," has led to an increase in the county jail populations.
"Rather dramatically, overnight, [realignment] changed the makeup of our jails," says Orange County assistant sheriff Steve Kea.
But Brown has been particularly resistant to one type of change: sentencing reform. While California's voters amended the state's Three Strikes law in 2012, without the governor's endorsement, Brown has taken public stances against further reforms, such as SB 649, which would have given prosecutors the flexibility to prosecute nonviolent drug crimes as misdemeanors rather than felonies.
"California is, traditionally, seen as a liberal state," says Lauren Galik, Director of Criminal Justice Reform at Reason Foundation. "But not when it comes to their sentencing laws and prison population."
For years, the California Correctional Peace Officer's Association (CCPOA), the prison guard union, has been one of the most powerful political forces in the state. It was a key player in the campaign to implement Three Strikes, and against the later failed campaign to repeal it. In 2010, the union poured more than $2 million in independent expenditures into Jerry Brown's gubernatorial campaign. Lynne Lyman, state director of the California Drug Policy Alliance, says that the enormous lobbying power of the law enforcement unions has hampered serious reform in the state and nationwide.
"It really doesn't matter which party an elected official is with," says Lyman. "The contributions that are coming in from the law enforcement associations and the private prison lobby… they're tremendous."
Watch the video above for a deeper dive into the politics of California's prisons, featuring interviews with state prison officials, local sheriffs, and former inmates.
Produced by Zach Weissmueller. Camera by Tracy Oppenheimer, Alexis Garcia, William Neff, and Weissmueller. Photography by Todd Krainin. Music by Chris Zabriskie. Approximately 9 minutes.
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It's too bad Gov. Brown doesn't have the unilateral power to release some first-time nonviolent offenders, ameliorating the overcrowding problem and corrective some unjust sentences.
His hands are tied!
Doing that would be betraying his Correctional System financial backers.
and of course crime has gone up as the county jails had to release their prisoners so they could make room for the prisoners from the big house.
I would guess that crime is uo (assuming it IS up) because that's what happens in command and control states. When you make everything criminal, you make everyone criminals. And, by shifting more and more "banned" items to the black market, you drive up the violent crimes associated with black markets. There's a reason "liberal" states have come of the highest crime and incarceration rates, notwithstanding the liberal reputation for being soft on crime.
I assumed left leaning states had the highest incarceration as well, but the Red and Purple states of the south have it pretty much covered.
The first two inarguably blue states (IMO), Delaware and Cali are 19th and 20th. I'd like to see the data with the warm weather = high crime phenomenon taken into account though and see if the data looks different.
Here in Cali, we have a greater problem with leftie judges and politicians who, like the water crisis, created the overcrowded prison crisis. Three years ago, we weren't so overcrowded. We've released at least 40,000 felons and now we're overcrowded?
Don't count on reliable crime stats coming out of Cali in the future. Last Dec big local news story that homicides increased 89% in Kern County. It was carried on multiple news outlets. The story seems to have been 'erased' from the internet, can't find it now.
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I wonder how much prison overcrowding there would be if they would legalize drugs. Is there anybody out there know the percentage of convicts in the California prison system are there for drug charges?
It takes quite a track record to get in prison. The media makes it sound like first time drug offenders go to state prison. It is rare unless there are severe circumstances, usually large quantities involved, and firearms used or possessed.
Maybe first time murderers, bank robbers, attempted murderers, rapists, and a few others, but please don't buy the "first offender" BS.
The "drug offenders" in jail are the ones who rob and kill to support their drug use.
The ones California wants to release are the people who steal your bike, your kid's aluminum skateboard, his bicycle, your lawnmower, power tools from your garage you left open when the phone rang, auto theft, "parts" of car theft (AKA auto boosting), sprinkler timers, garage door key pads. That's just from your home. Then we go to the worksite - power tools, chop saws, power cords, bath fixtures, circuit breakers, etc.
All "non violent", all stolen from honest people who are finding California unlivable.
These are the things that make an honest persons life miserable. Very few of us are victims of the crimes that wind people up in prison.
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