PRISONERS released over THE WORLD – for MINOR OFFENSES

IF you have NOTICED – SOME COUNTRIES are releasing PRISONERS or MINOR OFFENSES. IT STARTED a WHILE AGO. AND WE WILL START POSTING THESE RESULTS, as TIME GOES BY. IT WILL TAKE SOME TIME to CATCH-UP ON IT!

HERE ARE SOME STORIES!

http://www.gurtong.net/ECM/Editorial/tabid/124/ctl/ArticleView/mid/519/articleId/17343/WBGS-Government-To-Release-Prisoners-Charged-With-Minor-Crimes.aspx

WBGS Government To Release Prisoners Charged With Minor Crimes

The Minister for Gender and Child Welfare in Western Bahr el Ghazal State, Nema Abas last Friday, said that prisoners jailed in Wau Central Prison with minor offenses will be released on Monday.

By James Deng Dimo

WAU, September 4th, 2015 [Gurtong] The Minister said that the government will release the prisoners to decongest the prison.

“The prison is too congested in that many prisoners are sleeping on the floor, therefore, the State government has decided to form a committee that would go through such cases with the court over the release of these people,” said the Minister.

The Minister added that some prisoners have been detained for over six months because they could not afford fines they were charged with of about 150, 300 and 500 south Sudanese pounds only.

20 prisoners will be released daily when the exercises commences on Monday until all those charged with minor crimes are freed.

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https://1in100.wordpress.com/tag/nonviolent-offenders/

1 in 100

A monthly blog dedicated to shedding light on the prison problem in America

Posts Tagged ‘nonviolent offenders’

Dollar sign chainTurns out the recession may be the best thing to happen to America’s prisons in quite a while. As California struggles to devise a plan to release 40,000 inmates from its prisons as mandated by a federal court, other states are voluntarily looking to release prisoners early and exploring alternatives to incarceration in an attempt to both save money and fix the nation’s fractured prison system.

In recent months, states including Kentucky, Michigan, Colorado, Florida, New York, Ohio, North Carolina, and Mississippi have initiated early-release programs for nonviolent offenders. Not every prisoner is eligible for early release; typical participants have served time for small-quantity drug possession or minor offenses like parole violations. (In other words, felons and violent offenders don’t make the cut.)

Illinois recently decided to follow suit by announcing a plan to release 1,000 inmates, a move that could save the state $5 million in just one year. Governor Pat Quinn also allotted $2 million toward community-based alternative and drug treatment programs that will help keep people out of prison. This is an outstanding move–many community-based programs have a proven record of success at reducing prison entry and recidivism rates. And considering thatnearly 25 percent of prisoners are incarcerated for drug-related offenses, with some 33 percent of state prisoners and 26 percent of federal prisoners reporting they were under the influence of alcohol or drugs while committing the crime(s) for which they are imprisoned, these programs are essential for helping people avoid prison time and beat substance abuse.

Other states are trying alternative methods of keeping prison populations down. From 2007–2008, Texas, a state known for its tough sentencing laws,implemented drug and DWI courts designed to funnel people with drug and alcohol problems into treatment programs instead of sending them to prison. In addition to instituting alternative courts, Texas also halved probation times and increased parole rates, resulting in its prison population of 155,000 shrinking.

While the consequences of early-release programs have been widely debated, there is one benefit that cannot be ignored: releasing low-risk inmates frees up money for rehabilitative programs for current prisoners. Reducing the number of inmates currently incarcerated is one step toward improving the prison system, but significant investments in rehabilitative programming, both preventative and ongoing, must be made in order to quell the prison epidemic. The current recidivism rate in the United States hovers around two thirds; this is an astonishingly high figure that shows that the contemporary penal system simply isn’t working.

It’s not enough to let prisoners out of jail early– we also need to prevent them from returning to prison. That’s an investment we can all afford.

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http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/13/us-prisoners-sentences-life-non-violent-crimes

HERE ARE SOME OLDER POSTS – ON WHY PRISONERS should BE RELEASED as THEY HAVE DONE – NO HARM TO OTHERS [JUST THEMSELVES.} NON-VIOLENT CRIMES! PROTESTERS of the GOVERNMENTS are ALSO BEING THROWN in JAIL for SPEAKING OUT about the GOVERNMENT CRIMES against HUMANITY! THESE people NEED TO BE RELEASED TOO! PRISON is A SCARY PLACE TO BE – IN THERE – THEY ARE RULED by AGGRESSIVE INMATES and ONES – SERVING LIFE for MURDERS – PUSH OTHERS AROUND SHANK PEOPLE while they SLEEP and “RULE THE ROOST” over OTHERS!

Over 3,000 US prisoners serving life without parole for non-violent crimes

ACLU report chronicles thousands of lives ruined by life sentences for crimes such as shoplifting or possession of a crack pipe

A prisoner

65% of the prisoners identified nationwide by the ACLU are African American. In Louisiana, that proportion rises to 91%. Photograph: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

At about 12.40pm on 2 January 1996, Timothy Jackson took a jacket from the Maison Blanche department store in New Orleans, draped it over his arm, and walked out of the store without paying for it. When he was accosted by a security guard, Jackson said: “I just needed another jacket, man.”

A few months later Jackson was convicted of shoplifting and sent to Angola prison inLouisiana. That was 16 years ago. Today he is still incarcerated in Angola, and will stay there for the rest of his natural life having been condemned to die in jail. All for the theft of a jacket, worth $159.

Jackson, 53, is one of 3,281 prisoners in America serving life sentences with no chance of parole for non-violent crimes. Some, like him, were given the most extreme punishment short of execution for shoplifting; one was condemned to die in prison for siphoning petrol from a truck; another for stealing tools from a tool shed; yet another for attempting to cash a stolen cheque.

“It has been very hard for me,” Jackson wrote to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) as part of its new report on life without parole for non-violent offenders. “I know that for my crime I had to do some time, but a life sentence for a jacket value at $159. I have met people here whose crimes are a lot badder with way less time.”

Senior officials at Angola prison refused to allow the Guardian to speak to Jackson, on grounds that it might upset his victims – even though his crime was victim-less. But his sister Loretta Lumar did speak to the Guardian. She said that the last time she talked by phone with her brother he had expressed despair. “He told me, ‘Sister, this has really broke my back. I’m ready to come out.’”

Lumar said that she found her brother’s sentence incomprehensible. “This doesn’t make sense to me. I know people who have killed people, and they get a lesser sentence. That doesn’t make sense to me right there. You can take a life and get 15 or 16 years. He takes a jacket worth $159 and will stay in jail forever. He didn’t kill the jacket!”

The ACLU’s report, A Living Death, chronicles the thousands of lives ruined and families destroyed by the modern phenomenon of sentencing people to die behind bars for non-violent offences. It notes that contrary to the expectation that such a harsh penalty would be meted out only to the most serious offenders, people have been caught in this brutal trap for sometimes the most petty causes.

Ronald Washington, 48, is also serving life without parole in Angola, in his case for shoplifting two Michael Jordan jerseys from a Foot Action sportswear store in Shreveport, Louisiana, in 2004. Washington insisted at trial that the jerseys were reduced in a sale to $45 each – which meant that their combined value was below the $100 needed to classify the theft as a felony; the prosecution disagreed, claiming they were on sale for $60 each, thus surpassing the $100 felony minimum and opening him up to a sentence of life without parole.

“I felt as though somebody had just taken the life out of my body,” Washington wrote to the ACLU about the moment he learnt his fate. “I seriously felt rejected, neglected, stabbed right through my heart.”

He added: “It’s a very lonely world, seems that nobody cares. You’re never ever returning back into society. And whatever you had or established, its now useless, because you’re being buried alive at slow pace.”

Louisiana, where both Washington and Jackson are held, is one of nine states where prisoners are serving life without parole sentences for non-violent offences (other states with high numbers are Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Oklahoma and South Carolina). An overwhelming proportion of those sentences – as many as 98% in Louisiana – were mandatory: in other words judges had no discretion but to impose the swingeing penalties.

The warden of Angola prison, Burl Cain, has spoken out in forthright terms against a system that mandates punishment without any chance of rehabilitation. He told the ACLU: “It’s ridiculous, because the name of our business is ‘corrections’ – to correct deviant behaviour. If I’m a successful warden and I do my job and we correct the deviant behaviour, then we should have a parole hearing. I need to keep predators in these big old prisons, not dying old men.”

The toll is not confined to the state level: most of those non-violent inmates held on life without parole sentences were given their punishments by the federal government. More than 2,000 of the 3,281 individuals tracked down on these sentences by the ACLU are being held in the federal system. Overall, the ACLU has calculated that taxpayers pay an additional $1.8bn to keep the prisoners locked up for the rest of their lives.

timothy jackson
Timothy Jackson, in an old license photograph. Photograph: Jackson family

‘It doesn’t have to be this way’

Until the early 1970s, life without parole sentences were virtually unknown. But they exploded as part of what the ACLU calls America’s “late-twentieth-century obsession with mass incarceration and extreme, inhumane penalties.”

The report’s author Jennifer Turner states that today, the US is “virtually alone in its willingness to sentence non-violent offenders to die behind bars.” Life without parole for non-violent sentences has been ruled a violation of human rights by the European Court of Human Rights. The UK is one of only two countries in Europe that still metes out the penalty at all, and even then only in 49 cases of murder.

Even within America’s starkly racially-charged penal system, the disparities in non-violent life without parole are stunning. About 65% of the prisoners identified nationwide by the ACLU are African American. In Louisiana, that proportion rises to 91%, including Jackson and Washington who are both black.

The US has the highest incarceration rate in the world, with 2.3 million people now in custody, with the war on drugs acting as the overriding push-factor. Of the prisoners serving life without parole for non-violent offences nationwide, the ACLU estimates that almost 80% were for drug-related crimes.

Again, the offences involved can be startlingly petty. Drug cases itemised in the report include a man sentenced to die in prison for having been found in possession of a crack pipe; an offender with a bottle cap that contained a trace of heroin that was too small to measure; a prisoner arrested with a trace amount of cocaine in their pocket too tiny to see with the naked eye; a man who acted as a go-between in a sale to an undercover police officer of marijuana – street value $10.

Drugs are present in the background of Timothy Jackson’s case too. He was high when he went to the Maison Blanche store, and he says that as a result he shoplifted “without thinking”. Paradoxically, like many of the other prisoners on similar penalties, the first time he was offered drug treatment was after he had already been condemned to spend the rest of his life in jail.

The theft of the $159 jacket, taken in isolation, carries today a six-month jail term. It was combined at Jackson’s sentencing hearing with his previous convictions – all for non-violent crimes including a robbery in which he took $216 – that brought him under Louisiana’s brutal “four-strikes” law by which it became mandatory for him to be locked up and the key thrown away.

The ACLU concludes that it does not have to be this way – suitable alternatives are readily at hand, including shorter prison terms and the provision of drug treatment and mental health services. The organisation calls on Congress, the Obama administration and state legislatures to end the imposition of mandatory life without parole for non-violent offenders and to require re-sentencing hearings for all those already caught in this judicial black hole.

A few months after Timothy Jackson was put away for life, a Louisiana appeals court reviewed the case and found it “excessive”, “inappropriate” and “a prime example of an unjust result”. Describing Jackson as a “petty thief”, the court threw out the sentence.

The following year, in 1998, the state’s supreme court gave a final ruling. “This sentence is constitutionally excessive in that it is grossly out of proportion to the seriousness of the offence,” concluded Judge Bernette Johnson. However, she found that the state’s four strikes law that mandates life without parole could only be overturned in rare instances, and as a result she reinstated the sentence – putting Jackson back inside his cell until the day he dies.

“I am much older and I have learned a lot about myself,” Jackson wrote to the ACLU from that cell. “I am sorry for the crime that I did, and I am a changed man.”

Jackson expressed a hope that he would be granted his freedom when he was still young enough to make something of his life and “help others”. But, barring a reform of the law, the day of his release will never come.

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IF THE GOVERNMENTS and BANKSTERS – WERE NOT robbing everyone blind _ THERE WOULD BE NO THEFT! STEALING MONET OFF OF HUMANITY – LEADS TO CRIMES – MOST OF US WON’T DO THIS, NO MATTER HOW HARD LIFE GETS, BUT SOME DO. WE DO NOT WALK IN THERE SHOES. THE MAN WHO STOLE THIS JACKET, MAY HAVE BEEN HOMELESS, OR JUST “FREEZING TO DEATH!” BUT GOING TO JAIL FOR LIFE, FOR 159.00 IN PURE B.S. HERE’S ANOTHER WAY TO LOOK AT IT. PRISONERS MAKE LICENSE PLATES AND OTHER THINGS. THEY MAKE MONEY IN JAILS, A TINY AMOUNT, IF THIS MAN SAVED-UP THE 159.00 – AND PAID IT BACK – THERE WOULD BE NO CRIME – EXCEPT ON PAPER! THAT IS RIDICULOUS and INSANE! YET THE GOVERNMENT GOONS WALK AROUND, MURDERING and STEALING BILLIONS OF OF HUMANITY and YOU WONDER WHY “CRIMES” EXIST IN THE FIRST PLACE! MORE WILL BE RELEASED AS TIME GOES ON! HOW ABOUT PEOPLE WHO STEAL FOOD TO PUT ON THEIR TABLE – BECAUSE THEY ARE STARVING – SHOULD THEY BE LOCKED UP”? NOT AT ALL – THEY SHOULD BE SENT SOMEWHERE TO HELP THEM GET FOOD, OR GIVEN ONE OF THOSE NEW FOOD REPLICATOR THINGS – NOT GO TO JAIL FOR STARVING! MANY WILL SAY – AT LEAST THEY GET FED IN JAIL! – BUT BEFORE THOSE WORDS HIT YOUR LIPS – DO YOU DESERVE JAIL FOR FINDING THE ONLY WAY YOU KNOW TO FEED YOUR FAMILY? FINED- MAYBE – OR DO SOME COMMUNITY WORK AND A NUMBER FOR YOUR LOCAL FOOD BANK – BUT NOT JAIL!

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