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California a leader in number of youths in prison for life

The state has 227 inmates serving such sentences for crimes committed before they were 18, a new study says.
By Henry Weinstein
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-juvenile19nov19,1,5606326.story
From the Los Angeles Times
November 19, 2007

California has sentenced more juveniles to life in prison without possibility of parole than any state in the nation except Pennsylvania, according to a new study by the University of San Francisco's Center for Law and Global Justice. California currently has 227 inmates serving such sentences for crimes committed before they turned 18; Pennsylvania has 433.

The study, titled "Sentencing Children to Die in Prison," also found that the United States has far more juveniles serving life terms than any other country -- 2,387 at present -- with Israel running a distant second at 7. Israel, the only other country that imprisons juveniles for life, according to the study, has not issued such a sentence since 2004.

In the United States, life terms have fallen disproportionately on youths of color, with black juveniles 10 times more likely than white juveniles to be given a life without parole sentence, the report found. In California, black juveniles are 20 times more likely to receive such sentences.

"For many children, [life without parole] is an effective death sentence carried out by the state slowly over a long period of time," said Michelle Leighton, chief author of the study. The report found that 51% of juveniles sentenced to life without parole are first-time offenders.

The federal government and 44 states permit life sentences without the possibility of parole for juvenile offenders. "Among those states, 13 allow sentencing a child of any age to [life without parole] and one sets the bar at 8 years or older," the study said.

The report asserts that "harsh sentences dispensed in adult courts do not take into account the lessened culpability of juvenile offenders, their ineptness at navigating the criminal justice system or their potential for rehabilitation and reintegration into society. Psychologically and neurologically, children cannot be expected to have achieved the same level of mental development as an adult, even when they become teenagers."

Intensified advocacy on the issue has come in the wake of a 2005 U.S. Supreme Court decision, Roper vs. Simmons, in which the high court held that the Constitution prohibits executing an individual for committing murder if he or she was under the age of 18 at the time.

In California, state Sen. Leland Yee (D-San Francisco), a child psychologist, has introduced a bill that would modify the state's sentencing laws. SB 999, known as the California Juvenile Life Without Parole Reform Act, would allow for juvenile life sentences but amend the penal code so that such inmates would be able to apply for parole after serving 25 years.

"Children have an extraordinary capacity for rehabilitation," Yee said in support of the measure at a hearing in mid-April. ". . . Brain maturation continues well through adolescence and thus impulse control, planning and critical thinking skills are still not fully developed."

The measure, which cleared the Assembly Committee on Public Safety in April, is staunchly opposed by groups such as the California District Attorneys Assn., and the California Peace Officers' Assn. and Crime Victims United. In a statement to the committee, Crime Victims United said judges already "have the discretion to provide a sentence of 25 years to life and reserve life without parole for highly serious offenders. In order for a juvenile to obtain a sentence of life without parole, he or she must have committed a heinous, violent offense."

The issue is being litigated in court. Last March, two criminal defense lawyers filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the California Supreme Court challenging the sentencing of Antonio Nunez, who is serving life without parole after being convicted of kidnapping and attempted murder in 2003.

Nunez, who was 14 when the 2001 crimes occurred, was riding in the car of a 27-year-old man he had met at a party. The man offered him a ride home, and on the way kidnapped another man and then negotiated with the man's brother for ransom.

"Nunez's case is the only known case nationwide in which a 14-year-old was sentenced to die in prison for his involvement in a single incident in which no one was injured," according to the petition filed by attorneys Bryan A. Stevenson of Montgomery, Ala., and Jack M. Earley of Irvine. They contend that the sentence violates the Eighth Amendment prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment.

The California attorney general's office recently filed papers opposing Nunez' release and the California Supreme Court may might hear the case next year.
henry.weinstein@latimes.com

California Union Outlines Prison Reform Proposals

The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation has over 50,000 employees. The largest group is the guards' union with about 30,000 employees This union has been the most outspoken and "visible" element of CDCR. Another union has emerged, Service Employees International Union . SEIU has 14,000 positions in CDCR filling the non-custodial jobs; nursing, education, accounting, record analyst's, technicians, and many, many more functions. They claim to be the "R" (rehabilitation) in CDCR.

Local 1000 of SEIU has published a paper CDCR Reforms for Safer Communities, which looks at the Governor's proposal to build new prisons and create thousands of new beds for prisoners. The union is 1.8 million strong and operate in the US and Canada. They propose alternatives to the $11 Billion program and propose education, Expansion and improvements to rehab and reentry programs resulting in greater safety for the public and efficient use of funds. There are a number of specific recommendations SEIU asks the governor and legislature to consider before committing on the existing proposals.

This is an important blueprint from an experienced knowledgeable organization. Anyone interested in learning about the prison crisis in California should review this work.  

SEIU's report is available at:
http://seiu1000.org/docUploads/Corrections%20Reform%20Recommendations%20and%20Appendicies.pdf

Executive summary at:
http://seiu1000.org/docUploads/Corrections%20Reform%20Executive%20Summary.pdf


Letter to the Catholic Conference concering prison overcrowding

September 14, 2006

Most Reverend Bishop Stephen Blaire
President
The California Catholic Conference
1119 K Street 2 ND Floor
Sacramento, CA   95814

Your Excellency:

This letter expresses the concerns of our Council for the conditions in our prisons and the apparent lack of corrective action on the part of the Church.

The California Governor and Legislature failed in the recent Special Session of the Legislature to address the fact that State Prisons are at record numbers and will reach 200% of capacity by next June. The violence in prisons is exacerbated by overcrowding. California's overcrowding is without parallel. Gyms and Day Rooms are now stuffed with bunk beds. One man cells are overcrowded with two prisoners. Overcrowding is worse in women's prisons.

One proposal at the session would have moved 4,500 non-violent female prisoners to smaller detention homes. Another would have transferred 5,000 non-citizen prisoners subject to deportation upon sentence completion to facilities in other states. A third was legislation to release thousands of mentally ill, aged, and infirm prisoners no longer considered a threat to society.

The Federal Government has taken control of the prison health system because of flagrant health care violations in the prison system. They are also considering placing the entire system under Federal control. In light of that the lack of action by the elected officials can be looked at as is a dereliction of duty. The safety and security of the prisoners, prison staff, and ultimately the public is under serious threat.

There are two parole systems. For determinate sentence crimes a prisoner is released under supervision for a period of 3 years. Indeterminate sentences, (term to life) the prisoner is subject to Board review after the minimum term is reached to become eligible for   release. If both systems operated in the spirit intended overcrowding would disappear. However neither system is functioning and the prison system itself is the main cause of the failure.

In the determinate sentencing release situation, the inmates are not prepared to function outside. The recidivism rate of 70 percent is a direct result of failed or non-existent programs inside to reduce addictions, achieve academic standing, or develop work skills. The parolee is basically on his/her own unprepared for the challenge. The system returns parolees for minor infractions to the point where 70,000 prisoners today are recidivists. This rate is twice the national average.

Indeterminate sentences have effectively become life without parole sentences in California. More than 10,000 prisoners have passed their minimum dates. Yet they have been repeatedly denied parole for decades despite problem free behavior during those years. It is a fact that prisoners serving a 7 year to life sentence have passed 30 years of incarceration. The backlog for hearings is so large that the department was chastised by the courts for failing to catch up after being directed to do so. In recent years the number of prisoners who are recommended for release has been as low as 1% of those who received hearings. The 1% was then reduced further by the veto power of the Governor. It got to the point that the courts had to direct a handful of prisoners be released. Who is at fault for a 99% failure rate? It is hard to imagine the system does not bear some fault given an objective evaluation of this situation.

The information gathered here is no secret. Indeed the media has presented the facts and the crisis is known to the elected officials as well as the prison staff.

The New Testament clearly directs the Church to be deeply involved with those in prison. Matthew Ch. 25 V. 36 is unambiguous when it informs us, "I was in prison and you visited me..." and this is at the Final Judgment when the good sheep are separated from the goats.

If this direction is part of the Church's mission, why is there so little heard from the official church? Why is there not a pastoral letter read from every pulpit decrying the situation? When will a statement be made demanding help for the poorest among us. When will the prison authorities and elected officials be called on to fix something that is terribly wrong and extremely dangerous to all?

Very truly yours,

Raymond T. Bennett
Chair

Copy: Prison Ministry and Corrections Steering Committee
Auxiliary Bishop Gabino Zavala
Auxiliary Bishop Richard Garcia

 

 

 

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