Archive for March, 2007

h1

States rethink trying juveniles as adults

March 24, 2007

handcuffs.jpg

The following article speaks for itself. The only question we have is how did we get to this place in our society. On the one hand, we want to keep our children as children, and on the other, we treat them like adults when it suits us. Example, the young man in the article, Keith Pearl, was sentenced as an adult, however had he been a victim; he would have been treated as a child. What makes us think it is OK to have it both ways? Why are we one of the few countries in the world that take a juvenile, and put them in a prison system where they come out with a Masters Degree in Criminal Behavior? Do we not see the stupidity in this logic? Why did we start believing the lies politicians tell? How did we allow our society to move to a retributive justice model when all common sense tells us that Restorative Justice is the most efficient and effective solution. Is this not proof that our criminal justice system is dysfunctional at best or at worst, just plain broken? When are we going to find the will to fix this mess we have allowed our politicians to make?

 

From the Christian Science Monitor

 

March 22, 2007 edition

http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0322/p03s03-usju.html

 

States rethink trying juveniles as adults

Many minors in the adult correctional system aren’t violent offenders, a new report finds.

| Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

 

NEW YORK

Keith Pearl was with three friends when one of them allegedly stole two pairs of gym shoes, two T-shirts, and six pairs of socks from a classmate. He claims he had nothing to do with the robbery, but was just there when it happened. Still, under Illinois’s accountability law, Keith was charged with two counts of armed robbery and put in the Cook County Jail. That’s because the high school senior was 17, considered an adult by Illinois law. After serving several weeks in the adult facility, he was given probation and released.

Keith is one of an estimated 200,000 US juveniles under the age of 18 who ended up in the adult criminal justice system in 2006. That’s an increase of more than 200 percent since the 1990s, when states around the country began passing laws that required some juvenile offenders to be treated as adults.

The goal of such legislation was to ensure that the most egregious offenders – young murderers and rapists – were not released back into society when they aged out of the juvenile justice system at 18. But a report released Wednesday by the Campaign for Youth Justice, a nonprofit group advocating system reform, found that the majority of juveniles who are now being tried and jailed in the adult system are not violent offenders. A handful of states are reconsidering their laws on juvenile offenders, and others expect to this year.

“We now have children as young as 14 and 15, in their formative years, who are being housed with hardened criminals,” says Ned Loughran, executive director of the Council of Juvenile Correctional Administrators in Braintree, Mass. “And unless the youth has a life sentence, they’re going to be coming out sooner rather than later, and they’re going to be more of a threat to our public safety than if they’d been in the juvenile system where they can get services.”

Currently, 40 states have laws that allow juvenile offenders to be tried and sentenced as adults. In a few, including Connecticut, anyone over 15 is automatically treated as an adult, no matter what the offense. In other states, like Illinois, judges can decide whether to try juveniles as adults, although some violent offenses are automatically tried as adult crimes.

Many of these laws were passed when crime had ticked up to record highs in the early 1990s and conservative criminologists were talking about a new breed of “superpredator” youths. In most cases, legislatures acted after a particularly sensational case, such the attack on a Central Park jogger in 1989, when police said that a gang of roving kids raped and beat a woman almost to death. But in the ensuing years, crime has dropped significantly, and the superpredator theory has been discounted. And 13 years after five youths were convicted in the Central Park attack, an older serial rapist confessed to the crime.

New research has also shown that juveniles serving in adult facilities are at a much higher risk of being assaulted or abused. They also have significantly higher rates of recidivism compared with similar kids in the juvenile system.

“In fairness to the legislators, when they passed these laws, sometimes in haste, they didn’t have all the information that we have now,” says Liz Ryan, executive director of the Campaign for Youth Justice.

A handful of states have already revised some of their legislation. Others have set up commissions to study the issue. Ms. Ryan and other youth advocates are also pressing for Congress to amend legislation so that states are forbidden from housing any juvenile in an adult jail before trial.

But some conservative criminologists say the changes in the law in the 1990s have helped bring about the drop in crime. The laws are working as they should, they believe. “Usually, when a child is moved to the adult system, it’s a case where they have a long history of crime,” says David Muhlhausen, a senior policy analyst at the Heritage Foundation.

For his part, Keith went to night school to make up for the time he was in jail. He graduated and now intends to go to college. But because he has an adult felony conviction, his ability to get college loans will be limited.

 

h1

Where are the “Child Saviors”

March 23, 2007

We have to ask. Where is the outcry, where are the “child saviors,” why are politicians and the media not telling you about all the child neglect and fatality statistics?

 

What is truly amazing is that NO ONE and I mean NO ONE is screaming about the 2,600 some odd children that are killed each year as a result of firearm accidents. The fact that the United States leads the industrialized nations in the number of childhood deaths caused by accidents with over 7,453 per year, in front of Mexico with 5,949 per year (1) seems to be totally ignored by the mainstream media. Nor do I see anyone clamoring about the 2,223 deaths of teenagers in 2004 due to teenage drunk driving (2), or that in 2003, 2,136 children under 14 died as a result of drunk drivers (3).

 

The Child Welfare Information Gateway web site gives this summary of child abuse in 2004. “According to the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System’s most current report, Child Maltreatment 2004, of the approximately 872,000 child abuse and neglect victims in 2004, the largest percentage of perpetrators (78.5 percent) were parents. Other relatives accounted for an additional 6.5 percent, residential facility staff for 0.2 percent, and childcare providers for 0.7 percent. Unmarried partners of parents accounted for 4.1 percent of perpetrators, while legal guardians accounted for 0.2 percent and foster parents accounted for 0.4 percent.

 

In 2004, 57.8 percent of child abuse and neglect perpetrators were females and 42.2 percent were males. For the most part, female perpetrators were younger than male perpetrators; of the women who were perpetrators, 44.4 percent of females were younger than 30 years of age, compared to 34.1 percent of males.

 

More than one-half (57.9%) of all perpetrators were found to have neglected one or more children in 2004. Slightly more than 10 percent (10.3%) of perpetrators physically abused children, and 6.9 percent sexually abused children. Fifteen percent (15.5%) of all perpetrators were associated with more than one type of maltreatment.

 

There were variations in these overall patterns when the relationship of perpetrator to the child victim was considered. Of the parents who maltreated children in 2004, 2.6 percent committed sexual abuse, while 62.9 percent committed neglect. Of the perpetrators who were friends or neighbors, nearly three-quarters committed sexual abuse while 9.9 percent committed neglect.”(4)

Again, empirical evidence that in at least 90% of the cases, the child knew his or her perpetrator, be it a family member, friend, neighbor, or someone trusted by the child.

 

While these and other statistics are truly shocking, we should not be surprised that there is absolutely no coverage in the mainstream media. Our media has found it is easier to target sex offenders. We are in denial about the real problem of child abuse in America. At the end of the day, we are either the most ignorant people on the planet, or the most self-centered, or the least compassionate or all of the above.

 

 

(1) UNICEF

(2) MADD

(3) NHTSA

(4) CWIG Web Site

h1

Yellow Journalism in Augusta, Georgia

March 20, 2007

This “Political Cartoon” (see below) appeared in the Augusta Chronicle on March 20, 2007. We assume, rather safely I presume, it is in response to the tragic death of little Christopher Barrios. What is interesting is the fact that three days (March 17) earlier, I sent an Op-Ed to the Publisher. He responded (on March 19) with a simple “thanks.” The opinion follows the cartoon.

All this proves my point; the mainstream media in America is not interested in solving this problem because it sells too many papers, and generates high ratings. At the end of the day, it is apparent the owners and Board of Directors, the management teams of our media are only interested in the bottom line, not in the safety of our children.

Yellow Journalism

 

Christopher Barrios did not have to die, but he did, why? If we look at the events of the 2006 Georgia legislative session, we can find answers.

  1. Had the Georgia Representatives (led by Jerry Keen) and Senators (led by Eric Johnson) listened to Dr. Gene Able or Dr. James E Stark, and the other experts who spoke at the hearings last year, Christopher Barrios might still be alive today.
  2. Had they listened to the RSO’s who spoke at the hearings last year, Christopher Barrios might still be alive today.
  3. Had they implemented RISK ASSESSMENT and a risk level system for ALL the current RSO’s and not just the new ones after July 1, 2006, as was recommended to them, Christopher Barrios might still be alive today.
  4. Had they listened to the experts in Law Enforcement, and not forced Law Enforcement to spend all their resources on chasing LOW RISK offenders away from churches and employment, Christopher Barrios might still be alive today.
  5. ALL the Laws and Restrictions in the WORLD will NOT STOP someone who wants to offend, the Sex Offender Registry does not make children safer, and neither do SAFETY ZONES; however, THERAPY DOES. Offenders in therapy have the lowest recidivism rate. Had the legislators used common sense in place of political posturing, Christopher Barrios might still be alive today.
  6. Because they FAILED to LISTEN to the experts, because they FAILED to LISTEN to Law Enforcement, because they were looking for election year sound bites, they are JUST AS RESPONSIBLE for the death of Christopher Barrios as the perpetrator is.

Again, I ask the people of Georgia to LISTEN to the experts, and force their elected representatives to do the same. Within the past year, these experts have voiced their concern about the new laws, well-intentioned lawmakers are enacting. Here is what they are saying.

“What you’re doing is pushing people more underground, pushing them away from treatment and pushing them away from monitoring, you’re really not improving the safety, but you are giving people a false sense of safety.” – John Gruber, Executive Director of the Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers

“It may be time to do away with sex offender registration laws altogether. At the very least, the federal government should commission research to study the laws’ effectiveness. In the meantime, several changes should be made. States should differentiate between serious and non-serious offenders and only require registration of the most serious offenders. Next, public access to online sites should be dismantled, and registries should be kept at the local police stations. This would provide at least a minimal screening process to those seeking inquiries… Lastly, we should experiment with restorative justice models such as what has happened in Canada where sex offenders moving into a community meet with members of the community in a public forum facilitated by a trained mediator. This type of forum gives the community an opportunity to meet the offender face to face and express their concerns and for the offender to show the community that he is earnestly seeking to change his life.” – Rachel King, Professor of Law, Howard University School of Law, Washington, D.C.

“Though laudable in their intent, there is little evidence that recently enacted housing policies achieve their stated goals of reducing recidivistic sexual violence. In fact, there is little research at all evaluating the effectiveness of these policies. Furthermore, these policies are not evidence-based in their development or implementation, as they tend to capture the widely heterogeneous group of sex offenders rather than utilize risk assessment technology to identify those who pose a high danger to public safety.” – Jill S. Levenson, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Human Services, Lynn University

“I would rather have someone who has committed a sex offense be going to work every day, come home tired, have a sense of well-being that comes from having a regular paycheck and a safe home, as opposed to having a sex offender who has a lot of free time on his hands.” – Richard Hamill, President, New York State Alliance of Sex Offender Service Providers

“We’re not aware of any evidence that residency restrictions have prevented a child from being victimized.” – Carolyn Atwell-Davis, Director of Legislative Affairs, National Center for Missing and Exploited Children

“Therapy works for these people. Let them be punished for their crimes, let them out and let them get on with their lives. Let them work. Let them have stable homes and families and let them live in peace. Harassing them, making them move and continually punishing them does far more harm than good. A sex offender in therapy with a job and a place to live is less of a threat than one that is constantly harassed.” – Robert Shilling, Detective, Crimes Against Children Division, Seattle, WA

There is not a shred of evidence tough laws and residency restrictions have saved one child. There is however, corroboration from the experts, that Sex Offender Registries and “safety zones” are doing nothing more than giving the public a false sense of security.

Again, I call for a National Sex Offender Policy Forum. Georgia can pave the way by holding a Georgia Sex Offender Policy Forum. These forums would be comprised of treatment providers, law enforcement, jurist, victims, offenders, and their families. With the recommendations from the forum, legislators will know what laws need to be written, or amended in order to insure the safety of our children.

Why are we all in deep denial about this problem? As long as citizens rely on uninformed politicians, the misinformed media and myths about sex offenders, all children remain at risk. We need to come to terms with our denial and seek real solutions, and we need to do it today. How many more Christopher’s, Jessica’s, Dylan’s, Megan’s, Polly’s, and Jacob’s have to die before we WAKE UP?

At the end of the day, we are all responsible; we are all involved in the safety of our families and have an investment in the outcome of this discussion.

h1

Why did Christopher Barrios Die?

March 19, 2007

Christopher Barrios did not have to die, but he did, why? If we look at the events of the 2006 Georgia legislative session, we can find answers.

  1. Had the Georgia Representatives (led by Jerry Keen) and Senators (led by Eric Johnson) listened to Dr. Gene Able or Dr. James E Stark, and the other experts who spoke at the hearings last year, Christopher Barrios might still be alive today.
  2. Had they listened to the RSO’s who spoke at the hearings last year, Christopher Barrios might still be alive today.
  3. Had they implemented RISK ASSESSMENT and a risk level system for ALL the current RSO’s and not just the new ones after July 1, 2006, as was recommended to them, Christopher Barrios might still be alive today.
  4. Had they listened to the experts in Law Enforcement, and not forced Law Enforcement to spend all their resources on chasing LOW RISK offenders away from churches and employment, Christopher Barrios might still be alive today.
  5. ALL the Laws and Restrictions in the WORLD will NOT STOP someone who wants to offend, the Sex Offender Registry does not make children safer, and neither do SAFETY ZONES; however, THERAPY DOES. Offenders in therapy have the lowest recidivism rate. Had the legislators used common sense in place of political posturing, Christopher Barrios might still be alive today.
  6. Because they FAILED to LISTEN to the experts, because they FAILED to LISTEN to Law Enforcement, because they were looking for election year sound bites, they are JUST AS RESPONSIBLE for the death of Christopher Barrios as the perpetrator is.

Again, I ask the people of Georgia to LISTEN to the experts, and force their elected representatives to do the same. Within the past year, these experts have voiced their concern about the new laws, well-intentioned lawmakers are enacting. Here is what they are saying.

“What you’re doing is pushing people more underground, pushing them away from treatment and pushing them away from monitoring, you’re really not improving the safety, but you are giving people a false sense of safety.” – John Gruber, Executive Director of the Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers

“It may be time to do away with sex offender registration laws altogether. At the very least, the federal government should commission research to study the laws’ effectiveness. In the meantime, several changes should be made. States should differentiate between serious and non-serious offenders and only require registration of the most serious offenders. Next, public access to online sites should be dismantled, and registries should be kept at the local police stations. This would provide at least a minimal screening process to those seeking inquiries… Lastly, we should experiment with restorative justice models such as what has happened in Canada where sex offenders moving into a community meet with members of the community in a public forum facilitated by a trained mediator. This type of forum gives the community an opportunity to meet the offender face to face and express their concerns and for the offender to show the community that he is earnestly seeking to change his life.” – Rachel King, Professor of Law, Howard University School of Law, Washington, D.C.

“Though laudable in their intent, there is little evidence that recently enacted housing policies achieve their stated goals of reducing recidivistic sexual violence. In fact, there is little research at all evaluating the effectiveness of these policies. Furthermore, these policies are not evidence-based in their development or implementation, as they tend to capture the widely heterogeneous group of sex offenders rather than utilize risk assessment technology to identify those who pose a high danger to public safety.” – Jill S. Levenson, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Human Services, Lynn University

“I would rather have someone who has committed a sex offense be going to work every day, come home tired, have a sense of well-being that comes from having a regular paycheck and a safe home, as opposed to having a sex offender who has a lot of free time on his hands.” – Richard Hamill, President, New York State Alliance of Sex Offender Service Providers

“We’re not aware of any evidence that residency restrictions have prevented a child from being victimized.” – Carolyn Atwell-Davis, Director of Legislative Affairs, National Center for Missing and Exploited Children

“Therapy works for these people. Let them be punished for their crimes, let them out and let them get on with their lives. Let them work. Let them have stable homes and families and let them live in peace. Harassing them, making them move and continually punishing them does far more harm than good. A sex offender in therapy with a job and a place to live is less of a threat than one that is constantly harassed.” – Robert Shilling, Detective, Crimes Against Children Division, Seattle, WA

 

There is not a shred of evidence tough laws and residency restrictions have saved one child. There is however, corroboration from the experts, that Sex Offender Registries and “safety zones” are doing nothing more than giving the public a false sense of security.

Again, I call for a National Sex Offender Policy Forum. Georgia can pave the way by holding a Georgia Sex Offender Policy Forum. These forums would be comprised of treatment providers, law enforcement, jurist, victims, offenders, and their families. With the recommendations from the forum, legislators will know what laws need to be written, or amended in order to insure the safety of our children.

Why are we all in deep denial about this problem? As long as citizens rely on uninformed politicians, the misinformed media and myths about sex offenders, all children remain at risk. We need to come to terms with our denial and seek real solutions, and we need to do it today. How many more Christopher’s, Jessica’s, Dylan’s, Megan’s, Polly’s, and Jacob’s have to die before we WAKE UP?

At the end of the day, we are all responsible; we are all involved in the safety of our families and have an investment in the outcome of this discussion.

 

h1

Palestine and the Middle East

March 15, 2007

gaza_2006_11_09.jpg

In the photo, Palestinian youths look at the blood stains of their friends who died when an Israeli tank fired on their home. Israeli youths have had to look at the same type of scene. Why do we continue to allow this to happen in our world? Where is our humanity? Where is our compassion? Read on to understand why I ask these questions and what I see as a solution.

All of my adult life has seen conflict in the Middle East. From what I know of history, this conflict is rooted in its people and religious beliefs, even between Muslims. Moreover, the events of the last fifty years of the 20th Century are defining moments that we need to look at. Looking at this short-term history, during World War II, some Arabs sided with the Axis, others with the Allies. After the war, the British withdrew from the Palestine Mandate. This was mostly due to the increasing violence and their unwillingness to commit more resources to a growing volatile situation. With the UN Partition Plan of 1947, a Jewish state was created taking around 55% of the land and the rest was given to the Palestinians. Mind you, the Palestinians had called this their land for the past six centuries. The plan was accepted by the Jewish people and naturally rejected by the Arab League. The immediate aftermath was fighting which brought about what the Jewish people call, the War of Independence. The rest is as they say, history, the Suez Crisis, the Six Day War, the Yom Kippur War, The Lebanon War’s, the First and Second Intifada, all without real resolution or prospects for peace. Why?

 

I believe former President Jimmy Carter has best elucidated the core issue in his recent book, Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid. The Nobel Peace laureate, who will always be remembered for his Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt, has drawn sharp criticism for making this analogy. However, I feel his choice of terms to describe the current situation in Palestine is completely accurate. In an interview with Amazon.com, he gave this explanation on why he chose this word.

 

 

carter_jimmy.jpg“Forced segregation in the West Bank and terrible oppression of the Palestinians create a situation accurately described by the word. I made it plain in the text that this abuse is not based on racism, but on the desire of a minority of Israelis to confiscate and colonize Palestinian land. This violates the basic humanitarian premises on which the nation of Israel was founded.”

 

 

 

From what I can find on the internet, here is a breakdown of deaths, for both Palestinians and Israelis, during the six-year period of 2000 to 20061. (Note: these figures are not entirely accurate, but are close enough to get an idea of the real problem.)

 

Total Number of Palestinian deaths = 4209

 

* Children: 892

* Women : 273

* Men : 3044

 

Palestinians killed by Jewish settlers = 72

Palestinians killed as a result of Israeli shelling = 83

Deaths as a result of medical prevention at Israeli checkpoints = 117

* Of them stillbirths (born dead at checkpoints) = 31

Number of Palestinians extra-judicially assassinated = 561

* Of them bystanders killed during extra-judicial operations: 253

 

Total Number Israeli deaths = 1113

 

* Children = 113

* Women = 305

* Men = 603

* Settlers = 213

* Soldiers = 322

 

A UN study declares the humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip “intolerable”, with 75% of the population dependent on food aid2, and an estimated 80% of the population living below the poverty line3. The Palestinian economy had largely relied on Western aid and revenues, which has been frozen since Hamas’s victory. The situation can also be attributed to Israeli closures, for which Israel and the EU cite security concerns, specifically smuggling, possible weapons transfers and uninhibited return of exiled extremist leaders and terrorists; as well as an extremely high birth rate.

 

Until we find the moral courage to level the playing field, to support the Palestinian people the same way we support Israel, we will never find peace, nor will we find a solution to the terror question.

 

 

choas_in_the_palestinians_streets1.jpgPut yourself in the shoes of a young Palestinian man. Most likely, he either is unemployed or under employed, working for literally a few dollars a day. He does not have the opportunity to further his education. He does not have the ability to take his girlfriend on a real date. He does not have a chance to change his life. He does not have hope for the future. He sees young Israeli and western men doing these things and he naturally feels animosity for them. By leveling the playing field, economically and politically, we will reduce overall animosity for United States policy and Israelis in general. Folks, this is not rocket science, it is just plain common sense.

 

 

I cannot find a way to see peace in the Middle East as long as we, the United States and Europe, have two very separate and disparate support of ALL the people there. The Arab-Israeli conflict is the linchpin to the problem. Solve this quandary and you will solve the rest of the dilemma.

 

If human kind is to avoid a “clash of civilizations”, then we must find it within ourselves to understand the dynamics of the Middle East problem, we must find it within ourselves to recognize the humanity of all the peoples there. We must engender dialogue, open honest discussion, and keep the lines of communication open between all parties to the region.

 

We need the leaders of the United States, the European Union, and the Arab League to come to the negotiating table. It is time for humanity to tell the radical fundamentalist, of Islam, Judaism, and Christianity, we have had enough! It is time for mankind to put an end to this 60-year-old conflict. I fear that if we fail to do this, the human race is not long for this world.

 

 

1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_Israeli-Palestinian_conflict

2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_Israeli-Palestinian_conflict#September_2006

h1

The Last Great Republican

March 13, 2007

 

gen-ike1.jpg

This blog is nothing more than a collection of quotes from the man; I feel was the Last Great Republican.

 

His name?

 

Dwight David Eisenhower.

 

To my fathers generation, he was “Ike”.

 

He was born in 1890 and died in 1969.  He led the “Greatest Generation” as Supreme Commander, Allied Forces in Europe during World War II.  He was a man of morals and integrity.  He knew firsthand about the horrors of war.  He knew about the suffering of the innocent victims (the women, children, and old people) from misguided leaders and policy.

 

I like Ike, as the 34th President, he understood the possible nightmare that would result from the United States being a world power, and gave us warnings.  His profound insight is startling.  I will let you, dear reader, draw your own conclusions.  Let’s hear from him once more:

 

> “Should any political party attempt to abolish social security, unemployment insurance, and eliminate labor laws and farm programs, you would not hear of that party again in our political history. There is a tiny splinter group, of course, that believes you can do these things. Among them are H. L. Hunt (you possibly know his background), a few other Texas oil millionaires, and an occasional politician or businessman from other areas. Their number is negligible and they are stupid.” - Letter to Edgar Newton Eisenhower, 11-08-1954

 

> “I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, only as one who has seen its brutality, its stupidity”. - Speech in Ottawa (01-10-1946)

 

> “A people that values its privileges above its principles soon loses both”. - Inaugural address (01-20-1953)

 

> “All of us have heard this term ‘preventative war’ since the earliest days of Hitler. I recall that is about the first time I heard it. In this day and time… I don’t believe there is such a thing; and, frankly, I wouldn’t even listen to anyone seriously that came in and talked about such a thing”. - Press conference (1953)

 

> “This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience…we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist”. - Farewell speech as President (01-17-1961)

> “God help any man who sits behind this desk who doesn’t know the military like I do”. - Referring to how the military can control politicians

 

> “May we never confuse honest dissent with disloyal subversion”.

 

> “The problem in defense is how far you can go without destroying from within what you are trying to defend from without”.

 

> “When people speak to you about a preventive war, you tell them to go and fight it. After my experience, I have come to hate war. War settles nothing.”

 

> “Dollars and guns are no substitutes for brains and will power”

 

 

I believe when the history of the last four decades of the 20th Century and early years of the 21st Century is written about the United States of America, historians will say we did not heed Ike’s warning.

 

At the end of the day, the GOP, the party of Lincoln and Eisenhower, will be remembered as the Grand Old Pharisee’s, the party of the hypocritically self-righteous. The only problem is they will, like the Biblical Pharisee’s, never admit they are wrong, and our society will suffer, just as theirs did.

 

h1

Misguided Measures

March 8, 2007

Yet another report by the mainstream media, except this time there are subtle myths, and deception intertwined with the facts. A step in the right direction, but hardly a change in the way reporting on this issue will help solve the problem.

 

Example, the ABC News reporters use the term “creepy” and make it seem that Sheriff Zeller said it. What is creepy is the sloppy reporting and yellow journalism we are willing to accept.

 

Another example is the “interview” with RSO Mike Chalk. What the ABC News reporters leave out is his charge. The Iowa Sex Offender Registry shows: a conviction date of 10/25/2002 for Indecent Contact with a Child (0-13) and he is not requited to be Assessed as a risk. “Indecent Contact” does not necessarily mean Child Molestation. If he is 23 now, then he was most likely between 16 to 18 at the time of his offense. Perhaps, he is one of the 40% on the Sex Offender Registry who are, or were juveniles, at the time of their offense. Without meticulous reporting by the ABC News reporters, we will never know.

 

I will repeat the above statement so everyone understands what I am trying to say. “Indecent Contact” does not necessarily mean Child Molestation.

 

What the media is not getting, and what most Americans fail to understand is, when we use the terms “sex offender”, “child molester”, and “predator” interchangeably, we are not making children and women safer, we are in fact diluting the terms to the point they lose meaning and effectiveness.

 

On the surface, this article is a good start, at the core, it is more of the same, myths and misconceptions that are not doing anything to solve the problem. If and when the media becomes serious about solving this problem, they will step up, and demand a National Sex Offender Policy Forum. See my link to the Sex Offender Solutions Network for more info.

 

Misguided Measures

New Sex Offender Laws May Cause Bigger Problems Than They Prevent

By JIM AVILA, MARY HARRIS and CHRIS FRANCESCANI

ABC News Law & Justice Unit

 

March 7, 2007 —

 

Megan Kanka, Polly Klaas, Jessica Lunsford — the names break your heart at their very mention. All were victims of child sex predators.

 

But laws passed in their names may be making matters worse.

 

Across the nation, communities and legislators are enacting a wide variety of new laws to fight back against sex offenders. Some communities have set residency restrictions on sex offenders, others require GPS monitoring, and in Ohio there’s a proposal that would require registered sex offenders to put bright green license plates on their vehicles.

 

But a growing chorus of experts said that many laws targeting sex offenders have backfired. And the consequences could be far-reaching.

 

“In 2005, we had a series of very high-profile, very violent brutal sex crimes against children,” said Jill Levenson, a professor of human services at Lynn University in Florida. “And that really sparked a nationwide panic.”

 

‘Cluster’ Communities of Sex Offenders

 

Residency restriction laws are among the most common new legislative efforts to address community concerns. Many states have enacted laws that bar offenders from living within 2,000 feet of a school or day care center. In California, the required distance is a quarter mile.

 

But the not-in-my-backyard mentality that has understandably prompted much of this legislation may be producing the opposite effect.

 

In Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Sheriff Don Zeller said new residency restrictions are forcing offenders into rural parts of the county where they are far harder to keep track of — or worse, forcing them underground, where they can be lost track of completely.

 

“We’re finding that it’s almost impossible to keep track of individuals we have registered in the county,” Zeller told ABC News’ Law & Justice Unit. “Five years ago, we knew where about 95 percent of those individuals were. Now we’re lucky if we know where 50, 55 percent of them are.”

 

And paradoxically, Zeller said, the new restrictions are also creating creepy sex offender “clusters” — like the Ced-Rel Motel in Lynn County, where more than two dozen sex offenders lived at one time.

 

“What if some individual comes in there with a family and decides that they’re going to stay there overnight, not knowing that 26 sex offenders are living there? And what happens if then they expose their family because most families will send their kids down to get pop or ice and, unbeknown to them, there are 26 sex offenders living in that same complex?” Zeller said.

 

Polly Boland knows how that feels. Her family’s farm sits beside a sex offender cluster.

 

“We told our kids that if anything peculiar is going on, to go back to the house,” she said. “They’re really aware of it. Our dog Henry is a good watchdog. … We don’t feel unsafe, we wish they didn’t live there,” Boland said. “Other neighbors have thought about leaving, [but] we farm, and that’s not something we can do.”

 

On the Run

 

Worse still for Zeller are offenders who are driven underground by the sometimes draconian residency restrictions in some cities. Overlapping exclusion zones keep sex offenders from finding residence in most of downtown Tulsa, Okla., and Atlanta.

 

ABC News found Mike Chalk, a 23-year-old registered sex offender, living in an EconoLodge hotel room in Iowa with three other offenders.

 

“It’s a place to lay down and know that I’m out of the cold,” he said. “I know that the sheriff’s department knows that I’m off the street, and they don’t have to worry about me roaming the streets looking for a place to stay.”

 

But they are about to. Chalk said he can no longer afford the room, and that he’ll have to move out soon. Where to, he doesn’t yet know. He can’t find a job because of his offender status.

 

“What it’s done is driven people to — rather than come in and register and comply with the law — there’s no way they can find housing, so it forces them to be on the run or lie about where they are at,” Zeller said. “So that’s not creating a safe environment for the public at all.”

 

Paul Zandbergen, in the University of South Florida’s geography department, did a study in which he mapped the effects of residency restrictions in his state and found that “if you add up all the restrictions — almost nothing is left (that people can live in) fairly quickly.”

 

Low Recidivism Rate

 

One of Levenson’s aims is to dispel myths about sex offenders and base new legislation on research rather than reactionary politics.

 

“There is no research to suggest there there really is a relationship between where sex offenders live and whether or not they’ll repeat their crimes, and there also isn’t any evidence to demonstrate that these laws are really effective in preventing sexual crimes,” she said.

 

In fact, only 7 percent of sex crimes against kids are committed by strangers, according to Justice Department statistics.

 

Studies show that — contrary to popular belief — sex offenders have a lower recidivism rate than other types of criminals, re-offending in about 14 percent of cases.

 

“So, ironically, what happens with residency restrictions is that we end up creating exactly the types of risk factors that we know lead to higher recidivism rather than lower recidivism,” Levenson said. “In other words, we know that stability, social support and employment are really important factors to help criminals maintain a productive life and not resume a life of crime, so disrupting the stability of criminal offenders is not likely to be in the best interest of public safety.”

 

The ‘Stranger Danger’ Myth

 

Levenson said, the residency restrictions fail completely to address the 90 percent of sex offenders whose victims are children they already know.

 

“The myth of ’stranger danger’ is the idea that … sex offenders are lurking in parks and playgrounds,” she said. “And the unfortunate truth is that most children who are sexually molested are victimized by someone that they and their families know and trust — often family members [themselves].”

 

Danger Close to Home

 

Nancy Sabin is the executive director of the Jacob Wetterling Foundation, named for a Minnesota boy who was abducted at gunpoint in 1989 and never heard from again. The foundation spearheads preventive education programs aimed at protecting children from both stranger predators and sex offenders in their own communities or homes.

 

“Can you help me understand where all these sexual predators are coming from?” she asked rhetorically. “They’re coming from our homes!”

 

“Why do we pretend we don’t know where they are?” she asked, adding that Americans “need to see ourselves as part of the solution.”

 

Like Levenson and Zeller, Sabin is an unlikely opponent of sex offender residency restrictions.

 

“There’s not one case in the entire U.S. where a child or adult was not assaulted because of residency restrictions — it’s one of the largest wastes of resources and false sense of security things we’ve done yet,” she said.

 

Doomed to Failure?

 

Sheriff Zeller said he understood the intent behind residency restrictions and other enacted measures that target sex offenders. But he said we need to re-evaluate our strategies against sex offenders and come up with smarter solutions that are going to have better long-term impact on the problems.

 

While he said he’s certainly not an advocate for sex offenders, he does fear new laws make it tougher for them to walk the line.

 

“We’re taking their hope away,” he said. “We’re taking a place [to] stay and a [work]place they can become a productive part of. We are placing all kinds of restrictions on them. They are doomed to failure. … That’s the problem.

 

Copyright © 2007 ABC News Internet Ventures

h1

Prisoners of Ideology

March 8, 2007

The following article appeared online at CounterPunch. It has been seen on various Blogs, and I include it here to spark critical thought. I have highlighted important aspects and quotes. But first, my thoughts:

The failure of our Criminal Justice System is without a doubt the most important issue facing the citizens of the United States. Our decisions in the next couple of years will affect the future of our societal foundations of liberty and justice. In addition, by extension, it will affect our ability to provide health care, education, and infrastructure spending. As Mr. Gasper points out, we are throwing huge amounts of the public treasury down the black hole of knee-jerk, stupid laws.

In place of embracing proven Restorative justice, we embrace the failed model of RETRUBUTION.

Why? Because it make us feel superior? Perhaps because, it makes us feel safer? ON THE OTHER HAND, is it because we have lost the ability of critical thinking and are more interested in who won on American Idol or Survivor than on the real issues of our society?

Are we truly thinking about the next 50 years or just the next 50 days? Will history remember the Baby-Boomers of America as the most ignorant generation? Will we be remembered as the generation that were so consumed by our own safety and well being, that we sacrificed and abandoned the next generations and the future of the country?

Will we be remembered as a GENERATION OF LOOSERS?

Read the article and decide for yourself.

Political Gain, Societies Curse

 

 

 

 

America’s Draconian Approach to Criminal Justice

Prisoners of Ideology

CounterPunch Magazine / March 2, 2007

By PHIL GASPER

For the past thirty years, the United States has been on an imprisonment binge unprecedented in world history. In 1980, the total number of people incarcerated in the U.S. was 500,000. Today the number stands at 2.2 million, with a further 4.8 million on probation or parole. The total U.S. prison budget increased from $9 billion in 1980 to $61 billion by 2003.

While the U.S. has less than 5 percent of the world’s population, it now has 25 percent of the world’s prisoners. In other words, the country that often proclaims itself the freest in the world, imprisons its population at a rate over six times higher than the rest of the planet. The U.S. incarceration rate stands at 737 per 100,000, over five times higher than Great Britain and over twelve times higher than Norway. The statistics for minority populations are even more shocking. For Latinos, the imprisonment rate is twice the national average. For Blacks it is four times the national average, with over one million African-American men in prison or jail. In 2002, 10.4 percent of all Black males between the ages of 25 and 29 were imprisoned, and the numbers have not improved since then.

In a report presented to Congress last year, the bipartisan Commission on Safety and Abuse in America’s Prisons concluded, “We should be astonished by the size of the prisoner population, troubled by the disproportionate incarceration of African-Americans and Latinos, and saddened by the waste of human potential.” The report found medical and mental health care in prisons to be grossly inadequate, and noted a “desperate need for the kind of productive activities that discourage violence and make rehabilitation possible.”

Another report, issued in February by the Public Safety Performance Project of The Pew Charitable Trusts, predicted that the prison population alone (not including jails, juvenile institutions, and other detention facilities) will rise by 13 percent, or another 192,000 people, over the next five years, at an increased cost of $27.5 billion. The report identified long mandatory minimum prison sentences, reduced use of parole, and harsh parole and probation rules, which often send people to prison for minor violations, as mainly responsible for the increase. “Every additional dollar spent on prisons,” it pointed out, “is one dollar less that can go for preparing for the next Hurricane Katrina, educating young people, providing health care to the elderly or repairing roads and bridges.”

Nowhere is the crisis worse than in California. In 1977, the state had fewer than 20,000 prisoners. Thirty years later the number stands at 173,000. In its first 130 years as a state, California built twelve prisons. Between 1980 and 2005 it added another twenty-one, at enormous cost. Today, California spends $35,000 a year for every prisoner, compared to $7,000 for K-12 students and only $4,500 in support for college and university students.

Yet despite billions spent on new facilities, California’s prisons and jails are bursting at the seams, with many crammed to twice their intended capacity. In nearly every state prison, the gym and every other available space is packed with triple bunk beds, squeezing out opportunities for recreation, education, and rehabilitation. Most California prisons are in a permanent state of lockdown, which confines prisoners to their cramped cells for all but an hour or two a day, while essential services are in a state of collapse. In 2005, a federal court put the California prison health care system under outside control because of its shocking level of deterioration.

While some states have experimented successfully with drug rehabilitation and parole diversion programs, California has failed to reform its parole system and has the highest recidivism rate in the country, with 70 percent returning to prison within three years, often for minor violations such as missing a court appearance. This revolving door costs the state $1.5 billion a year and makes the overcrowding problem even worse.

The situation is so bad, that last October Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency in the prisons, and began making arrangements to move thousands of inmates to private prisons in Arizona, Tennessee, and elsewhere. Prison wardens are screening a video trying to persuade prisoners to transfer voluntarily, although so far only a few hundred have agreed. The film includes interviews with prisoners who have already been moved. “They talk to us like humans [here],” says one, “not like animals.” In reality, the private prisons have their own long record of brutality and abuse.

The predictable result of massive overcrowding has been frequent violence and rioting, with Black and Latino prison gangs frequently pitted against each other. In 2006, for example, the Los Angeles County jails were rocked by a series of riots. “There’s no question this city has turned its back on incarcerated youth and turned our jails into a byproduct of such neglect,” said Lita Herron, director of Mothers on the March. “Now we’ve seen the consequences of what happens if we continue to do nothing about it.”

But the situation is similar in many other states. “The explosions of violence we are seeing in Los Angeles are systemic nationwide,” Terry Jungel, past president of the National Sheriffs Association told the media at the time. According to the Christian Science Monitor, Jungel blamed “Years of get-tough-on-crime policies [that] have emphasized rhetoric over funding, and strict confinement instead of programs to address prisoner problems or conditions.”

“Truth in sentencing, three strikes and you’re out-it looks great on paper, but try to make it work,” Connecticut state Representative Michael Lawlor, a former prosecutor, told the Associated Press.

The huge expansion of the U.S. prison population has little to do with the level of crime. According to the most reliable data, U.S. crime rates have been stable or in decline since the mid-1970s. With the notable exception of homicide, crime rates in the U.S. are comparable to those of other developed countries that imprison their inhabitants at a much lower rate. Moreover, public concern about crime is not closely correlated with the actual crime rate, but shifts in relation to the amount of attention given to crime in the media and to the level of political rhetoric.

Conservative politicians first began making crime a major political issue as part of a strategy to roll back the reforms won by social activists in the 1960s. The civil rights movement made it no longer respectable to make openly racist arguments, so political figures declared a war on crime to send a coded racial message to the voters. One of the first was Richard Nixon. In notes taken at an Oval Office meeting shortly after Nixon’s election, H.R. Haldeman, his chief of staff, wrote, “[the President] emphasized that you have to face the fact that the whole problem is really the Blacks. The key is to devise a system that recognizes this while not appearing to.” Ronald Reagan pushed these policies further in the 1980s. At a time when social spending was being slashed and inequality and poverty were increasing, conservatives blamed bad individuals rather than underlying social conditions for crime.

The policies that created the current crisis were pushed not just by Republicans, but by many Democrats too. In California, it was Democratic Governor Jerry Brown who in 1977 eliminated indeterminate sentencing laws, which had allowed parole boards the option of releasing prisoners after serving relatively short sentences. Soon afterwards, the Democratic-controlled legislature eliminated rehabilitation and treatment as goals of the prison system, and passed legislation defining its purpose as only punishment.

During the 1980s, the Democratic legislature in California passed over 1,000 laws increasing the length of mandatory prison terms. According to a study by the Stanford Criminal Justice Center, many of these changes were “enacted as knee-jerk responses by lawmakers to horrific, high-profile and frequently isolated crimes.” They laid the ground for the 1994 passage of Proposition 184, the most draconian “three strikes” law in the country, which mandates life sentences for offenders with two prior serious convictions. Hundreds of people in the state are now serving life sentences for offenses such as petty theft or filing a false DMV application.

The American ruling class is well aware that it needs to solve its major prison crisis, but it finds itself unable to abandon the ideological framework that it has relied on for over thirty years. Once again, California provides a clear example. When Schwarzenegger assumed office in late 2003, he set a goal of reducing California’s prison population by 15,000, renamed the state’s correction department the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, and set up a prison review panel headed by former Republican Governor George Deukmejian. “The key to reforming the system,’ the panel concluded, “lies in reducing the numbers.”

Within a few months, however, the new governor began to reverse himself. In 2004 he played a crucial role in defeating Proposition 66, which would have reformed California’s “three strikes” law to make the third strike a serious or violent crime. Last year, Schwarzenegger also backed Proposition 83, which increases sentences for sex offenders. Rehabilitation programs have been scaled back and as a result, instead of declining, the California prison population has risen by another 12,000.

When progressive reforms have been passed, they have not been given the funds to succeed fully. In 2000, California voters approved Proposition 36, which requires probation and treatment for first-time drug offenders, rather than prison. Researchers say that the law has saved hundreds of millions in incarceration costs since it was enacted, but lack of money means that demand far outruns availability, increasing the likelihood that participants will suffer a relapse while waiting for treatment.

Two-thirds of California’s prisoners read below a ninth-grade level, and over half are functionally illiterate. Despite the fact that education is one of the best ways of reducing recidivism, only 6 percent of prisoners are in academic classes and 5 percent in vocational training. Moreover, many of the work programs are a joke. According to the Washington Post, “they often consist of having an inmate sweep or mop a small section of a hall over and over and over, for six hours.”

In the first half of 2006, two successive secretaries of the corrections department appointed by Schwarzenegger resigned, saying that their attempts to introduce changes had been blocked. One of them, Jeanne Woodford (the former warden of San Quentin), testifying recently in federal court before a judge who is considering whether to put the whole system into receivership, said that her proposals for parole and sentencing reform were derailed by Schwarzenegger’s aides, who told him, “Governor, it’s an election year.” By the end of last year, Schwarzenegger was proposing to borrow almost $11 billion to build two new prisons and expand the capacity of California’s prisons and jails by 80,000. The Governor has proposed a commission to reexamine the state’s sentencing laws, but he also declared that he will oppose any changes to California’s “three strikes” law.

But in February, Schwarzenegger started swinging back in the opposite direction. The San Francisco Chronicle reported that the had “quietly dropped a call he made last year to build new prisons in the same style the state had built in the past,” and backed a plan to move thousands of prisoners to smaller facilities closer to the big cities, with increased resources to help them reenter society on their release. Whether these new plans will come to fruition, and whether they will be adequately funded, remains highly doubtful. More likely, in the next few months Schwarzenegger will again begin to feel the pull of the “tough on crime” ideology on which politicians in both major parties have come to rely.

Meanwhile, the human cost of these policies continues to mount. “It’s always prison, prison, prison. It just corrupts you more,” Rodolfo Salcido, a drug addict who has been in and out of jail for years, told the Los Angeles Times last Christmas. “We need help. We’re sick. It shouldn’t just be back to prison.”

Phil Gasper teaches philosophy at Notre Dame de Namur University in California and writes the bimonthly “Critical Thinking” column for International Socialist Review. He can be reached at pgasper@ndnu.edu

###

 

 

 

h1

WMD = Weapons of Mass Deception

March 5, 2007

I got satellite over the weekend and found a great information source, LinkTV. While watching today, I saw a program called Weapons of Mass Deception, and feel compelled to post a blog about it. Many know that I have been beating the drums about the media for the past several years, when I became aware of bias in the reporting of stories about the criminal justice system.

betty-writer.jpgFrom the Link TV online program description: “This film explores the hidden story of the distorted media coverage during the Iraq war. There were two wars going on in Iraq – one was fought with armies of soldiers, bombs and a fearsome military force. The other was fought alongside it with cameras, satellites, armies of journalists and propaganda techniques. One war was rationalized as an effort to find and disarm WMDs – Weapons of Mass Destruction; the other was carried out with even more powerful WMDs, Weapons of Mass Deception. The TV networks in America considered their non-stop coverage their finest hour, pointing to the use of embedded journalists and new technologies that permitted viewers to see a war up close for the first time. But different countries saw different wars. Why?”

The film is included, on DVD, in a new book by former network producer Danny Schechter (ABC, CNN). Schechter makes a great argument for return of the media back to the people and out of the hands of the corporate conglomerates. (Click here to find out more on the book and film.)

Award winning, veteran independent journalist, Bill Moyers has now joined the call to repeal the Telecommunications Act of 1996. On January 12, 2007 he gave a speech at the National Conference for Media Reform in Memphis, TN. (Click here to read the speech.)

The Wikipedia entry on him states: “When he retired in December 2004, the AP News Service quoted Moyers, ‘I’m going out telling the story that I think is the biggest story of our time: how the right-wing media has become a partisan propaganda arm of the Republican National Committee. We have an ideological press that’s interested in the election of Republicans, and a mainstream press that’s interested in the bottom line. Therefore, we don’t have a vigilant, independent press whose interest is the American people.’”

What Schechter and Moyers are saying is that what we see on the network and cable news is not the real news. It is in fact at best irresponsible yellow journalism, at worst it is pure propaganda. At the end of the day, we need to reclaim our media from the large corporate conglomerates, and reinstate the Fairness Doctrine or we stand to loose our democracy. There are other issues as stake here as well, such as the erosion of the middle class and civil liberties. However, these issues all will ride on the outcome of what we allow to happen to the media.

Will we stay a republic, founded on the democratic principles of Jefferson, Adams, Paine, and others, or will we become an oligarchy, or worse, a totalitarian state?