Broadcast: May 5,
2003
By Jerilyn Watson
VOICE ONE:
Crime in the United States has decreased
in recent years. One problem now is
what to do about crowded prisons.
I’m Phoebe Zimmermann with Steve Ember.
VOICE TWO:
The criminal justice system is our
report this week the VOA Special English
program, THIS IS AMERICA.
VOICE ONE:
A new report says more than two-million
people were in prisons and jails in
the United States at the end of June
two-thousand-two. That is the most
ever. The country already had among
the highest rates of imprisonment1
in the world.
The government report says about four-and-a-half-million
others were on probation or parole
last year. People on probation have
not been sentenced to jail. Instead,
they are under court supervision.
People on parole have been freed from
prison. They must obey restrictions2
and also report to officials for supervision.
The Bureau of Justice Statistics prepared
the report. The report shows that,
as of last year, one in every thirty-two
people in the nation had been found
guilty of a crime. The United States
has a national population of two-hundred-ninety-million
people.
VOICE TWO:
The number of prisoners in America
has increased by four-hundred percent
since the middle of the nineteen-eighties.
Nationally, the rate of violent crime
has decreased to its lowest level
in the thirty years it has been measured.
During those years, so-called "get
tough" laws have provided longer
sentences for some offenses, including
drug crimes.
Two-thirds of the prisoners in the
United States are in federal or state
prisons. Local jails hold the other
one-third. People found guilty of
serious crimes usually are sentenced
to prisons. People awaiting trial
or sentenced for lesser offenses usually
are held in jails.
There are different kinds of prisons.
Prisoners who are not considered a
danger to others may be sent to a
minimum-security prison without many
restrictions. The most dangerous prisoners
are sent to maximum-security prisons
where life is extremely controlled.
VOICE ONE:
Over the years, the United States
has made prison reforms. Today, corrections
experts and prison-reform activists
propose more changes. For example,
they say more job training may help
keep prisoners from returning to jail
once they are freed.
There were record numbers of prisoners
last year. But the Bureau of Justice
Statistics says the growth rate of
imprisonment had already leveled off
by then. It calls the rise of imprisonment
during the nineteen-eighties and nineties
"dramatic."
VOICE TWO:
Half the states have acted against
overcrowding. Big states like California
and Texas have released thousands
of prisoners to save money and space.
Critics of the criminal justice system
say long prison sentences are not
necessarily making society safer.
But the Supreme Court recently upheld
a "three strikes" law in
California.
This law affects people found guilty
of three crimes. The law orders that
they serve from twenty-five years
to life in prison. This is true even
if their third crime was considered
minor. In the case that reached the
Supreme Court, the third crime was
stealing golf equipment.
One more thing about California: The
state just reported a four-percent
increase in major crimes last year.
Murders in the biggest population
centers, though down from ten years
ago, were up eleven percent from the
year before.
VOICE ONE:
Some criminal justice officials say
the increase in federal prisoners
in the United States is of special
concern. In two-thousand-two, federal
prisons held almost one-hundred-sixty-two-thousand
people. This is the first time the
federal system has had more prisoners
than any of the fifty states.
This happened partly because the Federal
Bureau of Prisons took control of
prisoners formerly held by the District
of Columbia. But, also, Congress has
expanded the federal prison system.
Congress has added many drug offenses
to the list of federal crimes.
VOICE TWO:
Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy
is among those who say the country
has too many people in jail.
Justice Kennedy also says prison terms
are often too long. He criticizes
policies where state legislatures
establish sentences that judges cannot
change. Such required sentences have
increased in number in recent years.
Mister Kennedy says these sentences
are sometimes severe and unjust.
(MUSIC)
VOICE ONE:
Americans are guaranteed "equal
justice before the law," in the
words of the Constitution. But there
is debate about the equality of the
criminal justice system toward the
poor and especially members of minority
groups.
About twelve percent of African American
males between the ages of twenty and
thirty-four were in prison or jail
last year. By comparison, four percent
of Hispanics, and less than two percent
of white males, were behind bars.
Bureau of Justice Statistics official
Allen Beck says the rate for young
black males has been going up in recent
years. Mister Beck says the bureau’s
new report shows the highest rate
measured.
In any case, men of all groups are
about fifteen times more likely than
women to go to prison. But an increasing
number of women are jailed these days.
The number of female prisoners grows
at an average rate of more than five
percent a year. The rate among males
averages less than four percent.
VOICE TWO:
Drug offenders are a major reason
for America’s huge prisoner population.
The Sentencing Project is an activist
group for criminal-justice improvements.
It says about sixty percent of federal
and more than twenty percent of state
prisoners are in for drug crimes.
Recently a number of states have taken
steps to change their drug policies.
They are considering sending drug
users to treatment programs instead
of prison. These programs are aimed
at ending the use of drugs. They also
are meant to reduce the number of
people in prison.
Arizona and California have approved
drug-treatment centers for non-dangerous
drug offenders. Kansas also is considering
a new drug law. It would require non-violent
drug offenders to be treated for up
to eighteen months. Supporters of
the law say it would remove the need
for almost two-hundred prison beds
by the end of next year.
VOICE ONE:
New York State has some of the nation’s
most severe drug laws. A person can
be sentenced to at least fifteen years,
and up to life, in prison for having
or selling drugs
The international organization Human
Rights Watch is based in New York.
It criticizes the state's drug laws.
It says these laws have led to the
unnecessary jailing of non-dangerous
drug offenders. It says the laws have
taken parents away from thousands
of children. Governor George Pataki
has been considering changes in the
state's drug laws.
(MUSIC)
VOICE TWO:
Reducing sentences for crimes would
surely lower America’s rate of imprisonment.
So would keeping nonviolent, first-time
drug offenders out of jail. But many
officials say reduced sentences would
lead to an increase in crime. They
say the public would be in danger.
Experts argue about how much drug
treatment programs cost as compared
with jailing. Some say treatment is
far cheaper. Others disagree.
Nola Foulston is a local law enforcement
official in the Wichita, Kansas, area.
She also is an official of the National
District Attorneys Association. Mizz
Foulston says she believes the yearly
operation of drug treatment centers
could cost a little less than jail.
But she worries about drug offenders
living free. Mizz Foulston says they
have much higher risk of returning
to drugs than if they are behind bars.
VOICE ONE:
Some stories do end happily. Bob is
fifty-five years old. He took cocaine
for more than twenty years. During
that time he served three jail terms.
Each time he left jail he quickly
became dependent on the drug again.
Several years ago, a judge ordered
Bob to enter a drug-treatment center.
Center workers closely supervised
his every move for a year. He received
intensive treatment and advising about
his life.
Bob has a job now. He also is studying
at night at a local college. He says,
"No more drugs--ever... and I
am never going back to jail."
VOICE TWO:
This program was written by Jerilyn
Watson. It was produced by Cynthia
Kirk. I’m Steve Ember.
VOICE ONE:
And I’m Phoebe Zimmermann. Join us
again next week for another report
about life in the United States on
our VOA Special English program, THIS
IS AMERICA.
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