Pubdate: Sun, 17 Feb 2002 Source: Chattanooga Times Free Press (TN) Copyright: 2002 Chattanooga Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.timesfreepress.com/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/992 EASE UP ON CRIMINALS? Two organizations that want light sentences for criminals are using shaky statistics and baffling logic to achieve that goal. The Sentencing Project and the Justice Policy Institute have issued reports rejoicing that some states are toning down their tough-on-crime stances in the wake of crime rates that have fallen during the past nine years. But there is good reason to be suspicious of the suggestions of the two organizations. First, the shaky statistics. Despite reports from the U.S. Justice Department, we really don't know what the United States' crime rates are. Experts acknowledge that standards for reporting crime vary widely from state to state. Even if two states -- or agencies within those states -- try to use the same standards, it is not certain that they do an equally good job of making sure all the agreed-upon crimes show up in the reports. This can be innocent. It might result, for instance, from overworked law enforcement agencies simply not having time to compile and sort all the crime statistics. Or it can stem from a desire not to seem overrun by crime. Tales of underreported crime on college campuses -- where officials worry about scaring away prospective students -- are numerous. Some authorities in Tennessee recently have said crime may appear to have risen in their jurisdictions after the publication this coming June of crime statistics under new reporting methods. It's not necessarily that the rates will have changed, but that the standards will be different. Then there's the confused reasoning put forth by the advocates of light sentencing. Even if Justice Department reports showing crime falling the past nine years are accurate, wouldn't it be nonsensical to dump the tough sentencing that may well be responsible for that drop? If there has ever been an argument for not fixing something that ain't broke, this is it. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D