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Three Strikes and You're In
— Finley Peter Dunne, Corporal Punishment
It is always refreshing when awareness and consequences catch up with the absurd. For more than 40 years, some thought that the way to reduce criminal activity was to limit the number of crimes a person was permitted to commit before life in prison without parole became the imperative alternative. Such enlightened approaches to crime were known as “three strikes” laws. Absurd applications are legion but my favorite is the Texas case of Rummel v. Estelle that was especially instructive because it introduced into the world of the air conditioner repairman a cautionary note. The case stands for the proposition that failure to satisfactorily repair an air conditioner when charging for the work may led to a prison sentence of life without parole.
In 1964 William James Rummel was convicted of fraudulently using a credit card in order to obtain $80 worth of goods or services and sentenced to 3 years in jail. One way of looking at that sentence was that if he got to keep the $80 worth of goods or services he effectively paid $26.67 for each of the years he spent in prison. Unfortunately, prison was not a didactic experience for him.
Within a year after his release, he passed a forged check in the amount of $28.36, pled guilty and was given 4 more years in the penitentiary at a cost to him, if he got to keep the money, of $7.09 a year. Viewed in a positive light, he was given room and board for 4 years for a very modest sum. The only thing he didn’t get was freedom. Sadly, and herein lies the cautionary tale for air conditioner repair people, it was his attempt to earn an honest living that got him back into prison for life.
As soon as he was released he went into the air conditioning repair business and charged a customer $120.75 for a repair. His work was unsatisfactory but he refused to return what he had been paid. In Texas that constitutes obtaining money under false pretenses and convicted of that, he was sentenced to prison for life under Texas’s three strikes law. He appealed and the U.S. Supreme Court upheld his sentence.
In an opinion written by Chief Justice Rehnquist in 1980, the Court held Mr. Rummel’s sentence did not violate the 8th and 14th Amendments’ ban against cruel and unusual punishment. The Chief Justice, apparently somewhat embarrassed by upholding Mr. Rummel’s sentence, said: “We all of course, would like to think that we are ‘moving down the road toward human decency’ Furman v. Georgia . . .. Within the confines of this judicial proceeding, however, we have no way of knowing in which direction that road lies” Not being a legal cartographer I could not then have commented on whether he was right or wrong in not knowing in which direction “that road lies.” Events today suggest, however, that he and his colleagues would have been well served by a legal GPS, had such a device then been available to the Court, since Mr. Rummel was one of many in the United States who received life sentences courtesy of the three strike laws.
Leandro Andrade, some 30 years later, received two consecutive 25 year sentences in California after stealing 9 videotapes from two different K-Mart stores in a two week period (following other convictions) and, once again, 5 members of the U.S. Supreme Court were comfortable with the application of the three strikes law.
Such historical ruminations are only timely because of a recent report in The New York Times that prisons are now overcrowded to the point where non-violent prisoners must be released for want of adequate space to house all the inmates. A few days after that report was published, a panel of federal judges in California issued a 184-page order requiring California to reduce its inmate population by 40,000 prisoners within two years. The court observed that the overcrowding resulted in the unnecessary death of one inmate per week (not, obviously, enough to solve the problem of overcrowding.) Although not attributing the overcrowding to three strikes laws, the court observed that the 750% increase in California’s prison population during the last 30 years is “the result of political decisions made over three decades, including . . . the passage of harsh mandatory minimum and three-strikes laws. . . . .” Now would be a good time for legislators to revisit the questionable penal policies that may or may not have reduced crime in the country but have undeniably increased the prison population to intolerable levels.
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19 Comments so far
Show AllRead "The Immaculate Deception" and see if you can figure out how many years the Bush family should get.
And then check this out....(if it does not come up, go to israelshamir.net and scroll down to the article...long read, but I guarantee you will not regret it)
http:/www.israelshamir.net/
Contributors/Collateral_Damage_911.pdf
This might work on two of our problems as well as reducing the number sentenced to prison: execute any executive who hires an "illegal immigrant." It would much discourage "illegal" immigration, and it would rid us of some predators.
godistwaddle August 8th, 2009 10:44 am...Not bad, but I am against capital punishment in MOST cases. Life sentences would be better with "Bruce" as their cellmate.
Here's one....Any CONgressman with a Swiss bank account gets a mandatory 50 years...no parole.
Another......Any contributions over what is actually spent on a campaign must be returned. If not, 25 years mandatory sentence in a maximum security prison.
Bring America Back !!!!
****Velcum,,,Brauchli, to Amurika, it has been a jackboot
police state for some time now !! Offshoot of the all powerful military-industrial complex.
9/11 was the shock & awe from PNAC ! It worked.
If we legalize the drugs, the jackboot cops won't be able to extort their payoff $$$ envelopes from the Dealers, now we just cant legalize the problem, we just cant have that !!!
So there accounts for the steady increase in prison pops.
Legalize the problem, empty the prisons. All too simple.
TruthKnoller August 8th, 2009 11:36 am.........Could not agree more. BUT, can you imagine the amount of money big pharma would pump to CONgress to keep that from happening. You think the health care pay off is huge? Nothing compared to what they would "CONtribute" to stop the legalization of ganja.
As Dennis Kucinich said in his wonderful "Prayer For America",
"There are two Americas". (Which was later pilfered by, and given credit to, Edwards)
Fair and equal justice under the law is concept only in this country. Be you wealthy and "powerful", you have no fear of incrimination or incarceration. But, fuck up an air conditioner....
Based on the performance of my new refrigerator, Sears should be doing hard time at Leavenworth.
Based on that: The entire US government should be in the same cell with Sears and the guy who stole a loaf of bread.
All laws passed in the last 25 years have been to do one thing: Increase profits for those who own the "justice" system. When Reagan decided that everything in America had to be held hostage for profit, prisons were one of the first things that went that way. And let's face it, you have very few law suits from the patrons of such a system.
Look at the things they have passed: Three strikes nonsense, increased penalties for drug offenses, jail time for not paying child support, and a whole lot of other foolishness that ensures a constant profit stream. In CO, for instance, they put you on probation, charge you all kinds of money for fines, and then they take away your driver's license to make sure that you will either NOT be able to pay because you can't get to work, or that they can then catch you driving without a license, an automatic probation violation. Then they can lock you up and steal even MORE money from the county or state itself.
In CO, just to use my state as an example, 25 years ago we spent $70 million a year on the entirety of the Dept of "corrections". Now, after 25 years of Reagan's BS, we spend $770 million per year on it. And at the same time we are 49th in education spending. And just how much "safer" are we? The cops are a bigger danger to the average person, in or outside of his or her own home, than the criminals are. We, just like in health care, are NOT getting what we are paying for.
We have allowed the authoritarians to have their way with us, and we are truly screwed. Being "tough on crime" is the same as being stupid on crime. It involves knee jerk reactions to things that aren't a real problem to the point of destroying all of society to save it. Typical right wing BS. Reagan bankrupted our country to save it, now we have idiots who destroy our tradition of free speech in order to save us from those who would stop us from speaking freely, we have "pro lifers" who bomb and shoot people in the name of the sanctity of life.
I've been saying for years that the righties won't be happy until half of us are in prison and the other half are watching us. It's their 100% employment plan. Unfortunately, we are up to our asses in prisoners and just can't afford to keep locking up everyone for everything.
Prisons should be used for those who we can't allow in society. The violent, the chronic thieves, those who prey on others for their sick and twisted pleasure. In short, REPUBLICANS.
One of the things that makes me sick is the laws allowing the gov't to sieze all your personal property if they catch you growing pot. Families being thrown out of their homes, losing their cars, for growing something that, unlike alcohol or tobacco, has never directly killed ANYONE, and actually improves many lives. It's just disgusting we live in such a police state. Here we are with 5% of the worlds population, and 25% of the worlds prisoners. We are the world leader in imprisoning our own population. And, rightwingers, in classic form, refuse to pay for the government service of prison, even though they WANT that service for everyone whose ever stolen a videotape,
pot... "hemp"... was outlawed in the late 1930's so as not to compete with I.E. duPont de Nemurs' Corp. rayon and other synthetics...
WWII added more urgency to the cause. Now it's institutionalized.
War on Drugs? BS. read: Cash Cow.
"Prisons should be used for those who we can't allow in society. The violent, the chronic thieves, those who prey on others for their sick and twisted pleasure."
Yes, I'm all for locking up the executives from health insurance and Big Pharma, who are responsible for the deaths of 22,000 people in America every year as well as approximately one million bankruptcies.
If I hear another American on TV, saying they live in the greatest country in the world, I am going to throw it (the TV, not the american) out the window.
Well I guess you better open that window, and unplug the TV and toss it out. Americans are notorious for patting themselves on the back.
Wouldn't it be funny if our laws were humanized because it was too expensive to enfore harsh ones?
A triumph of Capitalism.
CV,
That's the amazing part of the capitalist elite. They don't mind inefficiency and massive waste as long as they aren't paying for it. It if hurts the middle and low classes, so much the better from the elite point of view. Social services, infrastructure, public maintenance, etc, are all things the elite would rather see us gutter snipes do without. It's a big scam against the people over and over again. All these people coming out of prison during this horrible economy are going to make trouble along with many who have never been in prison. It sounds like another excuse to declare unending marshal law and selective law enforcement. Mad Max unless you live in the well to-do neighborhoods. And if you don't, tough shit.
many... if not most prisons systems are privatized.
then the "out-patient" prisoners... parolees... community servicers... et al... PAY... to meet their parole officers... urine tests... and a plethora of other fees for their "partial incarceration"...
there's gold in them thar sentences...
see the story of the two convicted judges sending up juveniles for minor first time offenses to a private juvenile detention center over a 12 year period in pennsylvania... net kickbacks to the two judges... $1.7 MILLION... plus the initial lobbying hanky panky to switch from county run detention to private sector...
even without the kickbacks... private prison construction and management is very profitable... sheets... laundry... food services... staff... administration...
and... of course... remedial programs... alchohol... drug abuse... education... etc... they are all way too costly... so at the same time... the programs aimed at rehabilitation are cut or non-existent...
So 40,000 ex-cons (does it say "non-violent" on the report when they apply for a job?) get released in California when the unemployment rate is hitting around 15%...
I think I'll stay in Vermont.
By the way, if you live in California, wear bright clothing. The "dirty harrys" in the police forces will soon declare hunting season on "suspicious" characters. I.E. they can't be put in jail so shoot to kill.
The british had a similar problem - the criminalisation of the entire bottom rung of society and consequent problems imprisoning them all. Their solution was "transportation" - ship 'em off here to Australia.
I wonder if the current effort by the US to clear Afghanistan of people is preparation for a similar solution?
http://www.users.bigpond.com/pmurray
http://www.paulmurray.id.au/ageofworms