Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Mass Incarceration Follows the Model of Health Epidemic

Dr. Ronald Fraser wrote an interesting op-ed column in the Times of Trenton using Columbia Professor Ernest Drucker's new book, “A Plague of Prisons: The Epidemiology of Mass Incarceration in America," to explain America’s addiction to prisons and mass incarceration. Fraser cites Drucker's use of an epidemic scenario to show how excessive incarceration spread from state to state.

Fraser wrote:

From 1970 to 2009, the total number of federal prisoners increased from 21,094 to 208,118. State prison inmates went from 177,737 to 1.4 million. When the 767,620 persons in local jails are added in, America’s grand total for 2009 was nearly 2.4 million people behind bars — a world record.

Fraser summarized Drucker's epidemic model:

The outbreak. To show his toughness on drug dealers, New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller sponsored the so-called Rockefeller drug laws of 1973. These laws, says Drucker, launched America’s prison epidemic. “Adopted in response to the rise in heroin use in New York in the 1960s,” he writes, “these laws mandated an elaborate new set of lengthy sentences for many drug offenses. In some cases, sentences for possession and sales of small quantities of drugs were equal to those given for many violent crimes — rape, assault and robbery.”
The epidemic spreads. The Rockefeller laws then became the model used by lawmakers in other states to adopt their own statutes that called for severe sentences for the possession and sale of drugs. In this way, the initial outbreak became contagious and spread throughout the nation.
Exposed populations. In New York, exposure to the Rockefeller laws was concentrated in the black and Hispanic communities — Drucker calls them “feeder communities” — and, by 1990, those convicted of violating these drug laws accounted for one-third of the state’s entire prison population. The incarceration rate for blacks and Hispanics was 30 times higher than for whites.
This pattern was repeated in other states as well, where new drug laws hit black and Hispanic communities especially hard.
Sustainability. While continued prosecution of low-level crimes is the engine that drives large prison populations, Drucker claims the epidemic is sustained by post-prison parole policies. More than 1 million paroled ex-convicts are constantly at risk of reincarceration. Violations of administrative and technical parole rules, not new criminal charges, annually account for about one-third of all state prison admissions. Today, two-thirds of all released inmates are returned to prison within three years.
Long-term harm. Exposure to the criminal justice system brings on two types of lasting consequences. First, ex-convicts who are re-entering society are often unable to find a job, decent housing and other social services. In addition, says Drucker, 25 percent to 30 percent of the children growing up in the so-called feeder communities have a parent behind bars. “These children of the incarcerated,” he says, “are the second major reason mass incarceration has become self-sustaining. ... Estimates are that between one-third and one-half of all juvenile hall inmates have a parent who has been incarcerated.”

Drucker concludes that “[w]e can now identify the features of an infectious disease gone out of control — not drug use itself, but how we handle America’s drug problems. Our decision to criminalize drug use in the United States has caused our epidemic of incarceration; hence, reform of our drug policies must be the first focus of our preventive strategy.” Simply by not incarcerating new cases involving nonviolent, small-time drug offenders would immediately cut prison admissions by 30 percent, Drucker says.

New York’s Rockefeller Drug Law Reform Act of 2009 revoked the mandatory sentences found in the original draconian statute, and it grants judges greater freedom in sentencing, including the option of sending addicted offenders to treatment, not prison. Earlier drug law reforms in 2004 and 2005 contributed to a decline in New York’s prison population from 70,199 in 2000, to 58,687 in 2009.

To read more:  http://www.nj.com/times-opinion/index.ssf/2011/11/opinion_how_americas_prison_ep.html

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