News (Media Awareness Project) - US SC: PUB LTE: Mandatory Sentences Cost Us in Many Ways |
Title: | US SC: PUB LTE: Mandatory Sentences Cost Us in Many Ways |
Published On: | 2003-07-26 |
Source: | Greenville News (SC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 18:15:56 |
MANDATORY SENTENCES COST US IN MANY WAYS
What can be done to help this state with the budget? My suggestion is to
take some of these inmates in our prison system out of prison and have them
under the home monitoring system. Let there be a set fee which this person
should pay on a weekly basis. A lot of these people are first-time drug
offenders who have been sentenced to these long, fixed prison terms,
without even a chance of rectifying their mistake. These laws are costing
our state millions of dollars. These people could be out here working and
paying taxes instead of locking them up for 15-25 years, and it costing the
taxpayers more money each year.
In my opinion, these first-time offenders should not have to do 85 percent
of these long sentences. The majority of these offenders work while
incarcerated and do not get any credit for this. By giving them credit, it
would give these inmates more ambition to try harder, instead of
discouraging them.
This war on drugs is not working, and mandatory laws for drug offenders is
not working. The jails are getting more full every day, with some of the
prisoners having to sleep on floors, or three prisoners to a two-prisoner cell.
Give these particular offenders another chance, and if they are repeat
offenders, put them back for the remainder of their mandatory sentence.
Come on, South Carolina, wake up!
Freda Robinson, Chesnee
What can be done to help this state with the budget? My suggestion is to
take some of these inmates in our prison system out of prison and have them
under the home monitoring system. Let there be a set fee which this person
should pay on a weekly basis. A lot of these people are first-time drug
offenders who have been sentenced to these long, fixed prison terms,
without even a chance of rectifying their mistake. These laws are costing
our state millions of dollars. These people could be out here working and
paying taxes instead of locking them up for 15-25 years, and it costing the
taxpayers more money each year.
In my opinion, these first-time offenders should not have to do 85 percent
of these long sentences. The majority of these offenders work while
incarcerated and do not get any credit for this. By giving them credit, it
would give these inmates more ambition to try harder, instead of
discouraging them.
This war on drugs is not working, and mandatory laws for drug offenders is
not working. The jails are getting more full every day, with some of the
prisoners having to sleep on floors, or three prisoners to a two-prisoner cell.
Give these particular offenders another chance, and if they are repeat
offenders, put them back for the remainder of their mandatory sentence.
Come on, South Carolina, wake up!
Freda Robinson, Chesnee
Member Comments |
No member comments available...