News (Media Awareness Project) - US NC: PUB LTE: Smarter Sentences |
Title: | US NC: PUB LTE: Smarter Sentences |
Published On: | 2004-03-01 |
Source: | News & Observer (NC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 19:53:15 |
SMARTER SENTENCES
I was pleased to read the Feb. 16 article outlining North Carolina's
overcrowded-prison problem and possible solutions. As the article
illustrated, our state is at a crossroads: we can either continue to build
costly new prisons at the expense of vital social services like schools and
hospitals, or we can implement sensible sentencing options that ease the
demand for dollars and prison beds while maintaining public safety. Two
years ago, a bipartisan commission including law enforcement, policymakers
and experts outlined modest sentencing reforms that would dramatically
impact prison space. For example, reforming the habitual offender statute
to lessen sentences for the lowest-level, nonviolent offenders would save
the state 1,763 beds over the next decades -- or approximately 2.5 prisons.
As someone who works with families of incarcerated North Carolinians, I am
all too familiar with the waste and senselessness of the current habitual
felon law. Although the law was intended to put away the most serious
offenders, the majority of people are convicted as habitual offenders for a
having a history of minor, nonviolent offenses like drug possession or theft.
People who break the law should be held accountable, but the punishment
needs to fit the crime. North Carolina has already taken the time to put
together sensible reforms. Now is the time to implement those common sense
recommendations and free up precious resources for programs that need them.
LaFonda Jones
N.C. Project Director, Families Against Mandatory Minimums
Durham
I was pleased to read the Feb. 16 article outlining North Carolina's
overcrowded-prison problem and possible solutions. As the article
illustrated, our state is at a crossroads: we can either continue to build
costly new prisons at the expense of vital social services like schools and
hospitals, or we can implement sensible sentencing options that ease the
demand for dollars and prison beds while maintaining public safety. Two
years ago, a bipartisan commission including law enforcement, policymakers
and experts outlined modest sentencing reforms that would dramatically
impact prison space. For example, reforming the habitual offender statute
to lessen sentences for the lowest-level, nonviolent offenders would save
the state 1,763 beds over the next decades -- or approximately 2.5 prisons.
As someone who works with families of incarcerated North Carolinians, I am
all too familiar with the waste and senselessness of the current habitual
felon law. Although the law was intended to put away the most serious
offenders, the majority of people are convicted as habitual offenders for a
having a history of minor, nonviolent offenses like drug possession or theft.
People who break the law should be held accountable, but the punishment
needs to fit the crime. North Carolina has already taken the time to put
together sensible reforms. Now is the time to implement those common sense
recommendations and free up precious resources for programs that need them.
LaFonda Jones
N.C. Project Director, Families Against Mandatory Minimums
Durham
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