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We
locked 'em up. They're getting out. What do we do now?
by
David Plotz
Every year, the United
States sets two prison records-one we talk about, and one we
don't. Our mania for incarceration is common knowledge: The
number of state and federal prisoners has quadrupled to 1.3
million in the past 25 years. But Americans have paid no attention
at all to the backdoor of the prison. Inmates are arriving at
an unprecedented rate, but they are also leaving at one.
This year, American
prisons will release more than 600,000 inmates, up from 170,000
in 1980. (To put it another way, a city with a population larger
than Washington, D.C., leaves prison every year. And this does
not even count the hundreds of thousands of lesser criminals
who finish short jail sentences.) We lock them up, but we don't
throw away the key. For all the hoopla that surrounds the death
penalty and life sentences, only a teeny fraction of inmates-fewer
than 4,000 per year-actually die in prison. Those who study
"prisoner re-entry" have a new catch phrase to describe
prisoners returning home: "They all come back."
Prisons still admit
about 50,000 more offenders than they release, which is why
the total census keeps increasing. But the growth rate is slowing,
and by 2005, prisons may be springing as many people as they
enroll. By 2010, according to University of California, Irvine,
criminologist Joan Petersilia, annual releases may reach 1.2
million.
(The United States
is becoming an ex-con nation. According to preliminary estimates
by researchers Christopher Uggen, Melissa Thompson, and Jeff
Manza, 5 million Americans are serving or have served prison
sentences. That translates into 5 percent of American men, and
15 percent-20 percent of black men. They also estimate that
13 million people-including one-third of black men-have been
convicted of a felony.)
Are the released
felons more dangerous than when they went up the river? According
to the best studies, the surge in incarceration is responsible
for one-quarter of the '90s crime drop. (Economics and demographics
are key reasons for the other three-quarters.) Does this mean
the crime rate will spike as all these folks return home? "That
is the $64,000 question," says Urban Institute senior fellow
Jeremy Travis, a leading scholar of prisoner re-entry. "And
no one has the answer."
Surprisingly little
is known about prisoner re-entry. Ex-cons are extremely difficult
to study, because they're transient and suspicious of authority.
Almost no one has paid attention to them for 20 years. The fascination
with prisoner rehabilitation that flowered a generation ago
has withered. Vocational and educational programs didn't cut
recidivism. Many parole boards, which had vast discretion to
free prisoners early, were stripped of their power after being
attacked from both the left (for being too hard on minorities)
and the right (for being too soft on everyone). And the political
climate chilled for prisoners, as the crime declines of the
'90s confirmed the popular belief that we should worry more
about putting them away than helping them out.
Still, enough information
exists to conclude that ex-cons are dangerous to society and
to themselves. In the mid-'80s, a major national recidivism
study-the only one that's ever been conducted-found incredibly
high rates of re-arrest and reconviction. Nearly two-thirds
of ex-inmates were re-arrested on serious charges within three
years, and 41 percent were reconvicted and returned to prison.
A tracked group of 68,000 ex-offenders committed more than 300,000
felonies and misdemeanors in the three years after release.
There are many reasons
to believe that today's army of released prisoners poses even
more danger and faces even worse prospects than the smaller
cohorts of the past. Ex-cons spend more time in prison than
they used to. According to "From Prison to Home,"
a report published by the Urban Institute this week, prisoners
released in 1998 served 27 percent longer than those released
in 1990-28 months versus 22 months. Longer sentences, contends
the Urban Institute's Travis, weaken the social and economic
ties that may shield prisoners when they return to society.
The longer you serve, the less contact you have with family,
friends, and employers; the more your job skills deteriorate;
the more your social network consists of other criminals.
Prisons do less now
to prepare inmates for life outside. Vocational and educational
programs have been cut and inmate participation in them has
dropped. Drug treatment is even scarcer than it used to be.
Though the proportion of inmates with drug problems has remained
steady, the percentage receiving treatment plunged from 25 percent
in 1990 to only 10 percent in 1997. States have also gutted
parole. "Truth-in-sentencing" laws-most states now
require violent felons to serve 85 percent of their sentences-mean
that more and more prisoners are serving most of their sentences
in prison then are released without any restrictions. More than
100,000 prisoners were released unsupervised last year. Researchers
suspect that unsupervised releasees have harsher re-entries
than those on parole. Not that parole is so effective: Budgets
have contracted, and the average parole officer monitors 70
felons, up from 45 a few years ago. Other transitional institutions,
such as halfway houses, have also weakened.
American society
remains hostile toward ex-cons, and new laws and surveillance
techniques make it easier to be tough on returning felons. Employers
can quickly check criminal records and deny employment to former
inmates. Some states have banned ex-prisoners from public employment
and public housing. The declining economy will hit ex-cons hard:
Since they are the most marginal employees, they are first to
lose their jobs in a recession. More and more live in the poorest
areas. The Urban Institute says that two-thirds of inmates return
to "core" urban counties (where jobs are scarce),
up from only half a decade ago. (California found that 70 percent-90
percent of its parolees are unemployed.)
Returning prisoners
may be more dangerous than they used to be. An enormous number
are violent: 140,000 of the 1998 graduating class are violent
criminals, up from 75,000 in 1985. More ex-offenders than ever
suffer mental illness. And ex-cons pose a health danger, too:
Prisoner rates of HIV infection, tuberculosis, and hepatitis
C run five to 10 times the national average. (According to the
Urban Institute, in 1997, one-quarter of all Americans with
HIV/AIDS were released from prison or jail.) Prisoners return
as disease vectors as well as crime vectors.
Not all the data
is awful. Releasees average 34 years old, up from 29 years old
in the '70s. (They are older because they are serving longer
sentences, and because the big baby boom cohort drags the average
age up.) Felons commit fewer crimes as they get older, so by
locking up crooks longer, we may be naturally aging them out
of a life of crime. The stats about violent ex-cons are also
ambiguous. Though record numbers of violent offenders are getting
out this year, they actually represent a lower percentage of
released inmates-only one-quarter of all releasees, down from
32 percent in 1985. (The percentage of violent offenders has
dropped because many more releasees are nonviolent drug offenders.)
The best news for
ex-cons may be that people are interested in them again. The
Urban Institute's Travis speculates that the record crime drop,
the strong economy, and perhaps even the success of welfare
reform have convinced Americans that ex-prisoners are worth
worrying about. The public policy community is seized with passion
about this. George Soros' Open Society Institute has been sponsoring
re-entry studies, as have at least two other major foundations.
The Urban Institute's "From Prison to Home" is the
first comprehensive prisoner re-entry report in years; the General
Accounting Office is publishing findings on federal re-entry
next week, and the Department of Justice will release the first
major recidivism study in 15 years this fall. Congress appropriated
nearly $100 million this year for pilot re-entry programs, and
the Senate Judiciary Committee is considering a new bill to
assist federal-prisoner re-entry.
No crystal answers
have emerged yet. (Most articles and reports, in fact, conclude
that: "We need further study .") How re-entry affects
the crime rate remains an open question, as does what kind of
programs best help ex-cons. Still, there are a few promising
ideas. Researchers had concluded that job training is useless,
but recent work by Shawn Bushway of the University of Maryland
hints that job training at least helps older prisoners, encouraging
them stay away from crime and stick to the legit economy. Other
evidence suggests that pre- and post-release drug treatment
helps ex-cons live straight. Many researchers insist that more
parole and rigorous supervision of ex-cons will dampen recidivism.
There is a very callous
reason why the current effort on behalf of ex-cons may succeed
where the attempts of the '60s and '70s failed. Today's fascination
with ex-cons is rooted not in emotion but in pragmatism. Most
researchers and activists don't seem greatly animated by sympathy
for prisoners. They fret about the threat the ex-cons pose to
public safety, public health, and general social order, and
worry little about the threat the ex-cons pose to themselves.
This is not a grand lefty crusade. No one is romanticizing what
prisoners are like and what reforms can accomplish. Conservatives
can embrace this struggle as easily as liberals. If we're stuck
with ex-cons-and we've finally realized that we are, by the
millions-we had better figure out something to do with them.
http://www.Slate.com
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