Pubdate: Wed, 16 Jun 2010
Source: AlterNet (US Web)
Copyright: 2010 Independent Media Institute
Website: http://www.alternet.org/
Author: Sylvia Clute
Note: After several years as a trial lawyer, Sylvia Clute became 
disillusioned with the legal system and began her search for a better 
way. She founded, led, and served as an advisor to numerous community 
and statewide initiatives. A pioneer in legal reform, she spearheaded 
changes in Virginia's laws relating to women and children. Her new 
book, Beyond Vengeance, Beyond Duality, is her first work of 
nonfiction. She lives with her family in Richmond, Va. You can find 
her online at www.sylviaclute.com

UTTER FAILURE; IT'S TIME TO RETHINK THE PRISON SYSTEM

Editor's Note: This article is based on the author's new book, Beyond 
Vengeance, Beyond Duality, published by Hampton Roads.

Our criminal justice system is based on a curious set of rules and a 
double moral standard. The state's burden of proving guilt is pitted 
against the accused's right to thwart such proof. The state claims to 
be the victim because its law has been broken, but if the accused 
lacks the resources of O. J. Simpson or Paris Hilton to defend 
himself, he feels victimized by the state, and too often is.

What about repairing the harm done to the other victim, the person 
who was robbed or raped? The prosecutor's job is to win the case and 
punish the accused, not make the victim whole. This means the 
victim's role is reduced to that of a mere witness for the state in 
its battle to win by making the accused lose. For the accused to win, 
defense counsel must try to make the victim appear as untruthful as 
possible. Caught in the middle of the attorneys' battle to win and 
make their adversary lose, the victim often feels revictimized. If a 
plea agreement makes a trial unnecessary, this victim becomes irrelevant.

Is this a good system for getting at the truth? About 130 death 
sentences have been commuted since 1973 because evidence later proved 
these people were innocent. Is the prosecutor's win more important 
than the truth about the guilt of the defendant? In many of these 130 
cases, the answer was yes. Sam Millsap, a former Texas prosecutor, 
now speaks openly of having sent an innocent man to death by 
presenting weak evidence that later proved to be false. Does this 
deserve to be called justice?

There is a better way, a form of justice that delivers fairness, 
mends broken relationships, and helps us get at the root causes of 
crime. There is, in fact, justice beyond vengeance.

Becoming Our Own Jailers

"Get tough on crime" has been a common mantra in the U.S. since the 
1970's and, indeed, we have. We now have over 2.3 million people 
locked up on any given day, approximately the same number as China 
and Russia combined. More than one in every one hundred adults in 
America is presently in jail or prison. Nationally, our prison 
industrial complex is a $60 billion-a-year industry.

This incarceration binge is destroying the fabric of our communities, 
some more than others. One in every 15 African American men lives in 
a prison or jail cell. If you are an African American male between 
the ages of 20 and 34, the ratio is one in nine. Hispanics are 
disproportionately affected as well. As of 2006, one in 36 Hispanic 
adults was behind bars.

Over the last 30 years more acts have been classified as crimes, many 
prison sentences have become mandatory, as well as longer, and early 
release for good conduct has been all but eliminated. Some defense 
attorneys advise their clients to plead guilty to crimes they didn't 
commit, reasoning that a short sentence for a lesser crime is better 
than risking decades behind bars that would be mandated if convicted 
of a more serious offense.

Few stop to think that, when the costs are added up, every year an 
inmate spends in jail or prison costs us about the equivalent of one 
teacher's salary. This choice between hiring teachers and locking 
people up hits our young people hard. Our tax dollars pay to 
incarcerate one in every 53 of Americans in their twenties. As more 
tax dollars are used for incarceration instead of supporting colleges 
and universities, tuition is rising so fast, fewer and fewer young 
people can afford to attend. Some officials even demand zero 
tolerance to deal with behavioral problems in our grade schools and 
high schools, giving our children an early taste of how readily our 
culture uses punishment to secure compliance.

As life sentences and sentences that span decades are now common, the 
elderly experience it, as well. Although criminal activity generally 
decreases dramatically with age, between 1992 and 2001, the number of 
state and federal inmates aged fifty or older almost doubled. The 
cost of keeping an older prisoner locked up is around $70,000 a year 
or more--not one, but two, teacher's salaries.

Before ever being judged guilty, many people held in jail (not 
prison) are awaiting trial. Those who can afford to post bail are 
generally released pending trial. Those who can't post bail remain 
locked up in what amounts to a modern debtor's prison. In 2006, more 
than 60 percent of those who spent time in jail were not convicted, a 
number that continues to grow.

In this punitive world, prisons have taken up the slack for the state 
and county hospitals that released millions of mental patients 
between the 1950s and 1980s. Because the majority of people behind 
bars in the United States have some type of mental illness, our 
prisons and jails are our "new asylums."

Not everyone in the system is locked up for a long time. When you add 
up all the people who go in and out, about ten million cycle through 
our jails and prisons every year. They bring the lessons they've 
learned, the diseases they've contracted, and the trauma they've 
experienced back to our communities. We have become a nation of 
jailers, not only of petty offenders and serious criminals, but also 
of ourselves.

The increasing incarceration rate far exceeds increases in the rate 
of crime. During an interview with Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear in 
2008, he stated that in the last thirty years, his state's crime rate 
had increased about 3 percent, but its inmate population had 
increased by 600 percent.

It's true, there are periods of escalating crime, and assuring the 
safety of our communities requires that some offenders--murderers, 
serial killers, psychopaths--be kept behind bars for long periods of 
time and perhaps for life. We have lost sight of the fact that these 
types of offenders are the exception.

Two Models of Justice

When we declare, "We want justice!" it is often coded language for a 
forceful attack, getting even, in which two wrongs are needed to make 
things right. It's a demand for vengeance and retribution.

But remember in October 2006, when an Amish community in Pennsylvania 
captured our attention after a man murdered five of their young 
school girls and then killed himself? They didn't call for vengeance. 
Instead, they rushed to comfort the murderer's family and asked those 
of us outside their community to be forgiving. The power embodied in 
their compassion stunned the nation. Their defenselessness touched 
our hearts and brought honor upon their community. This is an example 
of another type of justice.

When a breach in a relationship or the violation of community norms 
occurs, we often fail to recognize that we react in one of two 
distinct ways. On the one hand, our goal can be to punish the guilty. 
This punitive type of justice inflicts punishment and seeks the 
imposition of control to enforce compliance; its answer to harm is more harm.

The other system of justice works according to an internal design 
that matches accountability with the harm or conflict being 
addressed. All participants treat one another with dignity and 
respect. All interested parties get to hear and be heard so all 
points of view are considered, enhancing the possibility of 
resolution and goodwill in their future relations. When forgiveness 
is achieved it is mutually beneficial, creating a future free of 
anyone's bondage. Compassion and loving kindness are at the heart of 
this form of justice, and the outcome is a benefit to all. I call 
this unitive justice.

Ancient tradition and modern cultural norms have sanctioned both the 
punitive and the unitive approach to justice, giving us contradictory 
and confusing moral guidance. In one instance, we are told justice is 
found in proportional revenge: the old law of an eye for an eye, a 
tooth for a tooth. In the other, it is aligned with the ancient 
teaching we often call the Golden Rule: do unto others as you would 
have them do unto you, a moral compass found in some form in every 
major religion and culture. These conflicting moral codes reflect the 
two distinct forms of justice. We may not realize that they are 
mutually exclusive, but when you choose one, the other is not possible.

Punitive Justice

Because punitive justice is most often the norm in modern culture, we 
are inclined to accept this response without asking whether it 
produces a value-added product or not. This eye-for-an-eye model 
takes retribution, revenge, and vindication for granted because it is 
grounded in the belief that our safety lies in controlling or 
defeating those whom we fear. It considers none of punishment's 
collateral damage that occurs within the larger community. Punitive 
justice fails to address how the infliction of further harm or the 
deprivation of liberty translates into taking responsibility or how 
it rights the wrong it seeks to address, beyond getting even.

Punitive justice relies on a double moral standard that permits us to 
project blame for our killing (in the case of capital punishment, for 
example), on those whom we kill. We say they are responsible for our 
harm, not us, because they are evil and deserve to die. We unburden 
ourselves of moral accountability by saying, "They make us do it." 
Thus, our killing is deemed moral, while we contend theirs is not.

As is often the case, when both sides view the other as wrong-doers 
or evil, the killing becomes endless, while all claim self-righteous 
innocence. We fail to note that having two standards of morality--one 
for us and one for them--provides a flawed moral compass, even when 
matters of simple justice are at stake.

The so-called justice in the punitive approach is seen to lie in its 
requirement that the harm we do be proportional to the harm done to 
us, i.e., the gouged eyes and teeth knocked out by our side must be 
approximately equal in measure to the gouged eyes and teeth knocked 
out by those deemed guilty. The scales of justice are an appropriate 
symbol for this system of proportional revenge. While this punitive 
form of justice requires a degree of restraint that definitely makes 
it superior to barbarism, we can do better.

Unitive Justice

Unitive justice is not an idealistic fantasy. As the old punitive 
system is imploding, unitive justice is taking root and growing. It 
is appearing in our institutions in the form of restorative justice 
in the criminal law system, in some social model programs designed 
for jails and prisons, in collaborative law now being used in the 
civil law system, in transformative mediation, in schools using 
restorative processes as the disciplinary policy, and in various 
circle processes being used in many settings, public and private.

The defining characteristic of unitive justice is its inclusiveness. 
Its goals are healing, restoration, and reconciliation, an approach 
aimed at producing relationships that are harmonious, equitable, and 
peaceful. This is not a new approach. Among aboriginal people on the 
continents of North America, Australia, and Africa, there were some 
who long ago found ways to hold an offender accountable in ways that 
do not involve the harm, humiliation or deprivation that characterize 
punitive justice.

When used in a specially designed system of conflict resolution that 
is guided by a trained facilitator, experience shows that unitive 
justice can achieve meaningful accountability to the victim and the 
community, and sometimes to forgiveness of the offender as well. We 
saw heartfelt examples of this during the Truth and Reconciliation 
Trials in South Africa after the abolition of apartheid.

Being inclusive, unitive justice involves the participation of all 
who are affected in assessing the harm done and forging both a remedy 
and preventive measures, thus avoiding the separation that the 
us-versus-them system causes. Those harmed may include not only the 
primary victim, but also members of the victim's family, members of 
the offender's family, and the community at large. At the appropriate 
time and in a safe setting, the offender hears the victim and these 
other voices describe the harm from their perspectives. This furthers 
the offender's understanding and results in the moral learning that 
can motivate a desire to repair the harm and to be restored to the community.

Unitive justice approaches the victim, the offender and the community 
as parts of a whole and no one is forced to lose. The victim feels 
heard and valued, as the offender is held accountable in ways that 
are meaningful and aid the victim's healing. The community is seen 
for what it is, the basic building block of a safe and secure nation.

An example of a unitive justice approach in a jail setting is The 
Community Model in Corrections program in Emporia, Virginia. 
Following a well-planned set of activities that are consistent with 
unitive justice principles, such as respect, accountability, honesty, 
and integrity, the inmates in the program are largely responsible for 
helping one another recognize patterns in their lives and figuring 
out how to change them.

The objectives of the community model program are achieved at a 
fraction of the cost of traditional clinical treatment. Most of the 
on-site supervision occurs during the launch of the model. This 
stands in stark contrast to how traditional programs are run, some of 
which may have a couple of full-time licensed professionals serving 
as few as a dozen inmates at each institution. On the average, a 
community model program costs approximately one-fourth the cost of a 
traditional treatment program or therapeutic community.

A study of recidivism among those who complete community model 
programs shows that their recidivism rate in the three years after 
release is less than 10 percent.17 The track record for prisoners in 
traditional programs is dismal in comparison. A fifteen-state study 
found that, in only three years after release, more than two-thirds 
were rearrested.18 A recidivism rate of over 60 percent is the 
punitive justice norm.

Unitive justice does not condone or ignore wrongdoing. It is not a 
world of relative values or slack morals where anything goes. On the 
contrary, unitive justice reduces or eliminates wrongdoing by 
creating and maintaining a culture in which wrongdoing by anyone is 
not accepted behavior. One moral standard applies to all.

For example, in a prison in Virginia, when a guard ransacked an 
inmate's cell during an inspection, the guard was reprimanded. In the 
culture the warden established and carefully tended, the cells of 
inmates were seen as the inmates' homes and were to be treated 
accordingly. Inspections were to achieve their legitimate goal, not 
to violate the inmates' sense of security and self-respect that the 
warden was trying to instill. Misconduct among inmates in this 
particular prison were a rare occurrence.

Being held to a common moral standard that applies to and benefits 
everyone motivates members of the community to measure up, accepting 
the standards of the environment they are living in as their new 
norm. When shared community values do not sanction hurting one 
another, and this standard is applied to everyone, the need to use 
punishment to deter violence, to maintain order and control, quickly 
diminishes.

As confidence grows in the capacity of the community to provide for 
the safety of its citizens through peaceful means, trust develops. 
This facilitates reflection upon the whole system, including how the 
crime or breach arose and what can be done to avoid such breakdown in 
the future. Thus, only unitive justice has the power to restore 
balance and harmony among the victim, offender and local community, 
and at the same time, enable the root causes to surface and be dealt with.

The punishment-and-revenge approach does not restore harmony and 
balance within the community, and the control needed to constantly 
enforce compliance wastes resources. In contrast, unitive justice 
supports fundamental, enduring change and costs relatively little. As 
the accused is not pitted against the might of the state, due process 
is simple. Rich or poor, unitive justice provides a level playing 
field. Liberty and justice for all may actually be within reach when 
justice beyond vengeance--unitive justice--becomes the norm.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake