Monday, August 24, 2009

Antonovich says: CUT FAT NOT JAIL TIME

 

 

           

 

   PRESS RELEASE

Contact:  Tony Bell, Communications Deputy

Office:     (213) 974-5555   Cell: (213) 215-5176

E-mail:     tbell@bos.lacounty.gov

      

  August 21, 2009                                                                                                         For Immediate Release

 

CUT FAT NOT JAIL TIME

 


Reducing Felonies to Misdemeanors and Electronic Monitoring Are False Solutions

 

 

LOS ANGELES COUNTY – Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich called on legislators to cut bureaucracy and waste in Sacramento rather than release 27,000 felons into our neighborhoods. 

 

“The plan to release criminals into our communities, downgrade serious crimes and enact electronic monitoring is a step backwards in our effort to protect the public,” said Antonovich.  “Legislators must look to cut the fat from the bloated bureaucracy that has bankrupted this state – not open the jail cells.” 

 

Over the last four years, the number of Corrections Department administrators grew by 32%, while the inmate population grew by just 2%.  The Juvenile Justice System added 50% more administrators while the number of youth inmates fell by 41%.

 

A Harvard University study revealed that for each criminal locked up, there is a reduction of between five and six reported crimes.  “Releasing criminals will cost more in the long run as criminals commit additional crimes and are rearrested, retried and re-sentenced – leaving thousands of victims in their path,” he added.

 

According to the Bureau of Justice, stronger sentencing laws over the past 30 years  – including Three Strikes -- have clearly spared countless Americans from being assaulted, robbed, raped, and murdered.

 

In I973, 44 million crimes were committed.  By 2007, that number dropped by nearly 23 million -- even as the population grew by more than 75 million.  Violent crime has plunged by more than 59 percent since the mid-1990s -- from 51 crimes of violence per 1,000 US residents in 1994 to 21 in 2005.  

 

Antonovich says the state plan to release prisoners and place them on electronic monitoring threatens public safety. 

 

When a parolee on electronic monitoring illegally removes the device or leaves his home, a signal is sent to a contracted vendor -- which may be out-of-state or out of the country.  That vendor then notifies state parole of the violation.  Since state parole is understaffed, they will call the local police department to respond.  This lengthens response times and increases the burden on local law enforcement.    

 

 

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