Policy: Crime and Punishment

File version: $Id: crime.htm,v 1.6 2002/07/03 06:14:34 lars Exp $

Introduction

The United States have more prison inmates relative to it population than any other country in the world. Yet we have high rates of every kind of crime: Burglary, armed robbery, murder. Something is not working.

Goals

Motivations

"Reduce prison population"

We used to sneer at Russia, South Africa and China, pointing to how many people they were putting in prison "for no good reason" and claiming that the fact that they had more people in prison was proof that the regime was illegitimate. Yet today, we have a larger fraction of our population in prison than any other country on earth. What does that make US?

The ever-growing prison population is also an ever-growing drain on our resources, driving taxes up. We are building prisons instead of building schools. And let us not forget that the annual cost of housing a prison inmate is about the same as the annual cost of tution and housing at a first-rate private university.

In recent years, the crime rate has dropped - conservatives claim that is because we have locked up most of the violent criminals - but annual number of years of prison sentences "awarded" has not gone down with it. Why would that be? Could it be because there now is a prison industry (construction and operation) with a financial interest in locking people up?

"Reduce crime rates"

It should be a basic human right for the inhabitants of the country to be secure in their homes (as well as on the streets). Although there has been a drop in the rate of violent crime in recent years, it is not clear that it is significantly correlated with the ever-longer sentences metered out. In fact, there is some evidence that few potential criminals are deterred by draconian punishments unless they think they will get caught and punished, and we have generally not been very successful at investigating, apprehending and sentencing.

I see some significant factors in high crime rates, and I think we can attack some of these and bring down crime rates:

Recommendations

Marihuana should be transferred from schedule I to schedule II, possession for personal use should be decriminalized, and a controlled circulation for medical use should be allowed under regular medical prescriptions. Sale outside of the pharmacy system should be a misdemeanor, as should cultivation of more than three plants without a license.

Drug treatment programs should be readily available ot those who want them, and should be mandatory for a all prison inmates who need them. At a minimum, we should be able to keep our correctional facilities drug free.

Public education should be repaired, so that nobody who is educable is denied an education that makes them able to support themselves and have families. Those who are mentally handicapped beyond education should also be taken care of outside the prison system.

Contentious Issues

Drugs

For the last 3 decades, the United States government has led the western world in a "War on Drugs", which has done enormous damage to civil liberties, the economy and the public health. This document advocates a radical change in that policy. This fact folder contains some of the suppporting evidence behind that recommendation.

While it is clear that morphine and its derivatives are quite deadly, it is not at all clear that marihuana is inherently worse than alcohol and tobacco, for which we have concluded that although they are not wonderful in their social and public health effects, a prohibition is worse than a modest amount of use.


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