Pubdate: Wed, 30 Nov 2011
Source: Ledger-Enquirer (Columbus, GA)
Copyright: 2011 Ledger-Enquirer
Contact:  http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/237
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing)

JUSTICE SYSTEM REFORM COULD BE YEAR'S HIGHLIGHT

It's interesting how, when the economy gets tough, common sense 
suddenly acquires bipartisan advocacy and the added virtue of affordability.

Back in the flush and heady '90s, common sense all but vanished from 
the realm of criminal justice -- or rather (in fairness to those who 
didn't make the rules but bore most of their effects) from the 
politics of criminal justice. Money wasn't a problem, long-term 
consequences be damned, and get-tough, jail-'em-'til-they-rot 
demagoguery carried the day.

The result was chest-beating political idiocy like two-strikes rules, 
mandatory minimum sentences and the like, most notably in the 
near-epidemic brain paralysis of the war on drugs.

Now, in the second decade of a new millennium, the legacy of that 
political frenzy is a seemingly bottomless economic and correctional 
swamp. Prisons are bursting, correctional costs are ballooning, and 
nobody believes we're one whit safer. Georgia's annual corrections 
spending now exceeds $1 billion a year, and budget analysts say if 
nothing changes, the state will have to come up with an extra $264 
million over the next four years for -- you guessed it -- more prison space.

It should go without saying that crime demands strong and effectively 
deterrent punishment, and dangerous criminals need to be locked away. 
Public safety has to trump other considerations. But when we can no 
longer afford what isn't working, then the public is obviously 
spending too much money for too little safety.

A Special Council on Criminal Justice Reform, with bipartisan support 
and the strong backing of Gov. Nathan Deal, is considering some 
fundamental changes to be proposed in the coming session of the 
Georgia General Assembly.

Some of the proposals would involve significant up-front expenditures 
for long-term savings, like community-based drug courts and 
alternative sentencing centers for nonviolent offenders. Others would 
involve relatively little expense, like a sweeping revision of 
sentencing laws and something the council calls a "safety valve" for 
judges. It's what, in a saner age, we called judicial discretion -- 
the authority of a judge to impose a sentence based on the specific 
circumstances of a case, rather than on arbitrary guidelines imposed 
by posturing politicians 20 years ago.

"Having served as a trial judge," said state Supreme Court Chief 
Justice Carol Hunstein, "I know there are really differences in the 
same kinds of crime when you look at the defendants and the facts of 
the crime."

A comprehensive overhaul of Georgia's criminal justice system could 
be a landmark legacy of this administration and this legislature. 
Concerns about being labeled "soft on crime" or about somebody else 
getting credit would be a pathetic excuse for doing nothing.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom