Pubdate: Sun, 04 Feb 2001
Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL)
Copyright: 2001 St. Petersburg Times
Contact:  490 First Ave. S, St. Petersburg, FL 33701
Website: http://www.sptimes.com/
Forum: http://www.sptimes.com/Forums/ubb/cgi-bin/Ultimate.cgi
Author: Robyn E. Blumner

ONLY THE RICH CAN AFFORD TO BUY REDEMPTION

As Bill Clinton saw it, Marc Rich had been punished enough. He had spent 17 
years in Spain and Switzerland, living high on his millions. But he was 
unable to return to his homeland, the good ol' U.S. of A., because here he 
would be called to answer for a 51-count indictment that included 
accusations of buying oil from Iran while Americans were being held hostage.

According to Clinton, Rich, whose ex-wife has given and raised hundreds of 
thousands of dollars for the Clintons and the Democrats, deserved to be 
pardoned.

Ah, redemption, second and third chances. It is something Clinton 
understands well. We are all fallible humans, and when we do wrong, we need 
to know there is the opportunity to start over, to be forgiven and get our 
lives back on track.

But in today's world, redemption is just another exclusive playground of 
the rich, a purchased indulgence. Those without resources are more often 
branded for years by their past crimes, with the government 
enthusiastically heating the iron.

Tammie Barber's case is a good example. Barber, a carpenter and Pinellas 
County resident who was recently profiled by Times staff writer Curtis 
Krueger, worked through a serious drug addiction with perseverance and 
treatment. After turning her life around, she developed breast cancer and 
was no longer able to work. Her $241-per- month welfare payment wasn't 
enough for private-sector housing but because of prior drug convictions she 
and her 5-year-old daughter have been turned away from public housing.

Barber was caught up in the "One Strike" rule of the federal department of 
Housing and Urban Development, which encourages local housing authorities 
to evict or block families from public housing if any member has engaged in 
certain criminal activities.

And here's another law the drug-abusing rich don't have to worry about. In 
1998, Congress decided to deny student loans to former drug users and 
dealers. Last year, nearly 8,000 students who applied for federal financial 
aid for higher education were deemed ineligible for all or part of their 
request due to past drug convictions.

(Great idea, don't you think, keeping young people with drug problems out 
of school so they never have a more attractive employment option than drug 
dealing?)

Also, ex-felons in Florida, as in numerous other states, are barred from 
voting. You may have paid your debt to society but you're still marked. And 
if you're an immigrant who has been living here legally most of your life, 
but once, maybe decades in your past, committed an "aggravated felony" (a 
phrase so broadly construed it includes minor drug crimes), expect to be 
deported.

None, though, has it worse than former sex offenders. While some people who 
fit this category have certainly committed heinous crimes, we never allow 
these ex-convicts to be redeemed. Instead, we track 'em, hound 'em and run 
'em out of town. In all states, people labeled sex offenders have to alert 
authorities every time they move. In many places local police are required 
to alert neighbors to the presence of a sex offender in their midst. Kindly 
neighbors then take it upon themselves to burn down his house.

Former sex offenders who aren't being roughed up in their communities often 
find themselves in prison-like mental institutions. Sixteen states have 
statutes like Florida's Jimmy Ryce Act where so-called sexual predators may 
be involuntarily committed for an indefinite length of time after serving 
the entirety of their prison sentence.

But the saddest example of the government's retrenchment on the notion of 
redemption is in the area of juvenile justice. We used to view young people 
as still developing to maturity and therefore less culpable than adults.

Today, minors are still not mature enough to vote or drink, but juvenile 
offenders 11 years old and younger are deemed as responsible as any adult 
and face punishments that steal any opportunity for a new start. Last 
month, 13-year-old Lionel Tate of Fort Lauderdale was convicted of 
first-degree murder, a verdict that carries a sentence of life in prison 
without the possibility of parole. He had been charged as an adult after 
beating 6-year-old Tiffany Eunick to death in what he claimed was a 
professional wrestling re-enactment.

Why have we decided that people are irredeemable? We know change is 
possible. Look at George W. Bush. He went from a drunken-driving gadabout 
to president.

Of course, the George Bushes and Marc Riches of the world have money and 
connections -- their safety net acts like a trampoline. Alternatively, for 
the Tammie Barbers and Lionel Tates of the world, there is no margin for error.
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