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10 Reasons to Oppose "3 Strikes, You're Out"
The American public is alarmed about crime, and with
good reason. Our crime rate is unacceptably high, and many Americans
feel like prisoners in their own homes, afraid to venture out
for fear of becoming another statistic.
For more than past 20 years, state and federal crime
control policies have been based on the belief that harsh sentencing
laws will deter people from committing crimes. But today, with
more than one million people behind bars, and state budgets depleted
by the huge costs of prison construction, we are no safer than
before. New approaches to the problem of crime are needed, but
instead, our political leaders keep serving up the same old strategies.
Take the so-called "3 Strikes, You're Out" law, for
example. Embraced by state legislators, Congress and the President
himself, this law imposes a mandatory life sentence without parole
on offenders convicted of certain crimes. Despite its catchy baseball
metaphor, this law is a loser, for the following reasons.
1. "3 Strikes" Is An Old Law Dressed Up In New Clothes
Although its supporters act as if it is something
new, "3 Strikes" is really just a variation on an old theme. States
have had habitual offender laws and recidivist statutes for years.
All of these laws impose stiff penalties, up to and including
life s entences, on repeat offenders. The 1987 Federal Sentencing
Guidelines and mandatory minimum sentencing laws in most states
are also very tough on repeaters. The government may be justified
in punishing a repeat offender more severely than a first offender,
but "3 Strikes" laws are overkill.
2. "3 Strikes" Laws Won't Deter Most Violent Crimes
Its supporters claim that "3 Strikes" laws will have
a deterrent effect on violent crime. But these laws will probably
not stop many criminals from committing violent acts. For one
thing, most violent crimes are not premeditated. They are committed
in anger, in the heat of passion or under the influence of alcohol.
The prospect of a life s entence is not going to stop people who
are acting impulsively, without thought to the likely consequences
of their actions.
Another reason why repeat offenders do not consider
the penalties they face before acting is because they do not anticipate
being c aught, and they are right. According to the American Bar
Association, out of the approximately 34 million serious crimes
committed each year in the U.S., only 3 million result in arrests.
3. "3 Strikes" Laws Could Lead To An Increase In Violence
Many law enforcement professionals oppose the "3 Strikes"
law out of fear such laws would spur a dramatic increase in violence
against police, corrections officers and the public. A criminal
facing the prospect of a mandatory life sentence will be far more
likely to resist arrest, to kill witnesses or to attempt a prison
escape. Dave Paul, a corrections officer from Milwaukee, Oregon,
wrote in a newspaper article: "Imagine a law enforcement officer
trying to arrest a twice-convicted felon who has nothing to lose
by using any means necessary to escape. Expect assaults on police
and correctional officers to rise precipitously." (Portland Oregonian,
3/94). Ironically, these laws may cause more, not less, loss of
life.
4. "3 Strikes" Laws Will Clog The Courts
The criminal courts already suffer from serious backlogs.
The extraordinarily high arrest rates resulting from the "war
on drugs" have placed enormous burdens on prosecutors, defense
lawyers and judges, whose caseloads have grown exponentially over
the past decade. "Three strikes" laws will make a bad situation
even worse. Faced with a mandatory life sentence, repeat offenders
will demand costly and time-consuming trials rather than submit
to plea bargaining. Normal felonies resolved by a plea bargain
cost $600 to defend, while a full blown criminal trial costs as
much as $50,000. Since most of the defendants will be indigent
and require public defenders, the expense of their defense will
be borne by taxpayers.
5. "3 Strikes" Laws Will Take All Sentencing
Discretion Away From Judges
The "3 Strikes" proposals differ from most habitual
offender laws in that they make life sentences without parole
mandatory. Thus, they tie the hands of judges who have traditionally
been responsible for weighing both mitigating and aggravating
circumstances before imposing sentence. Judicial discretion in
sentencing, which is admired all over the world for treating people
as individuals, is one of the hallmarks of our justice system.
But the rigid formula imposed by "3 Strikes" renders the role
of sentencing judges almost superfluous.
Eliminating the possibility of parole ignores the
fact that even the most incorrigible offenders can be transformed
while in prison. Countless examples are on record of convicts
who have reformed themselves through study, good works, religious
conversion or other efforts during years spent behind bars. Such
people ought deserve a second chance that "3 Strikes" laws make
impossible.
6. The Cost of Imprisoning 3-Time Losers For Life
Will Be Prohibitively High
The passage of "3 Strikes" laws will lead to a significant
increase in the nation's already swollen prison population, at
enormous cost to taxpayers. Today, it costs about $20,000 per
year to confine a young, physically fit offender. But "3 Strikes"
laws would create a huge, geriatric prison population that would
be far more expensive to care for. The estimated cost of maintaining
an older prisoner is three times that required for a younger prisoner
-- about $60,000 per year.
The cost might be worth it if older prisoners represented
a danger to society. But experts tell us that age is the most
powerful crime reducer. Most crimes are committed by men between
the ages of 15 and 24. Only one percent of all serious crimes
are committed by people over age 60.
7. "3 Strikes" Will Have a Disproportionate Impact
On Minority Offenders
Racial bias in the criminal justice system is rampant.
African American men, in particular, are overrepresented in all
criminal justice statistics: arrests, victimizations, incarceration
and executions.
This imbalance is largely the result of the "war on
drugs." Although studies show that drug use among blacks and whites
is comparable, many more blacks than whites are arrested on drug
charges. Why? because the police find it easier to concentrate
their forces in inner city neighborhoods, where drug dealing tends
to take place on the streets, than to mount more costly and demanding
investigations in the suburbs, where drug dealing generally occurs
behind closed doors. Today, one in four young black men is are
under some form of criminal sanction, be it incarceration, probation
or parole.
Because many of these laws include drug offenses as
prior "strikes," more black than white offenders will be subject
to life sentences under a "3 Strikes" law.
8. "3 Strikes" Laws Will Impose Life Sentences on Offenders
Whose Crimes Don't Warrant Such Harsh Punishment
Although "3 Strikes" sponsors claim that their purpose
is to protect society from only the most dangerous felons, many
of the "3 Strikes" proposals encompass a broad range of criminal
conduct, from rape to minor assaults. In an open letter to the
Washington State voters, more than 20 current and former prosecutors
urged the public to vote against the "3 Strikes" proposal. To
explain why they opposed the law's passage, they described the
following scenario:
"An 18-year old high school senior pushes a classmate
down to steal his Michael Jordan $150 sneakers -- Strike One;
he gets out of jail and shoplifts a jacket from the Bon Marche,
pushing aside the clerk as he runs out of the store -- Strik e
Two; he gets out of jail, straightens out, and nine years later
gets in a fight in a bar and intentionally hits someone, breaking
his nose -- criminal behavior, to be sure, but hardly the crime
of the century, yet it is Strike Three. He is sent to prison for
the rest of his life."
9. Let the Punishment Fit the Crime -- A Constitutional Principle
Under our system of criminal justice, the punishment
must fit the crime. Individuals should not be executed for burglarizing
a house nor incarcerated for life for committing relatively minor
offenses, even when they commit several of them. This principle,
known as "proportionality," is expressed in the Eighth Amendment
to the Bill of Rights:
"Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive
fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted."
Many of the "3 Strikes" proposals depart sharply from
the proportionality rule by failing to take into consideration
the gravity of the offense. Pennsylvania's proposed law treats
prostitution and burglary as "strikes" for purposes of imposing
a life s entence without parole. Several California proposals
provide that the first two felonies must be "violent," but that
the third offense can be any felony, even a non-violent crime
like petty theft. Such laws offend our constitutional traditions.
10. "3 Strikes" Laws Are Not A Serious Response To Crime
The "3 Strikes" proposals are based on the mistaken
belief that focusing on an offender after the crime has been committed,
which harsh sentencing schemes do, will lead to a reduction in
the crime rate. But if 34 million serious crimes are committed
each year in the U.S., and only 3 million result in arrest, something
must be done to prevent those crimes from happening in the first
place.
Today, the U.S. has the dubious distinction of leading
the industrialized world in per capita prison population, with
more than one million men and women behind bars. The typical inmate
in our prisons is minority, male, young and uneducated. More than
40 percent of inmates are illiterate; one-third were unemployed
when arrested. This profile should tell us something important
about the link between crime and lack of opportunity, between
crime and lack of hope.
Only when we begin to deal with the conditions that
cause so many of our young people to turn to crime and violence
will we begin to realize a less crime ridden society.
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