Times Daily
Dennis Sherer
November 27, 2007
Officials say many prisoners released early to make room for other
inmates
Bryce Graham Jr. gets frustrated when
someone is convicted of a crime and
sentenced to a lengthy prison term only to return home a few months
later.
"It makes me mad when it happens, but there's nothing I can do," said
Graham,
the district attorney for Colbert County. "The reason for so many people
getting
sent home on parole after serving just a few months of a sentence that
was
supposed to last for several years is very simple. There's just not any
place to
keep them locked up."
Brian Corbett, a spokesman for the Alabama Department of Corrections,
said the
state has 24,622 convicts locked up in prisons designed to hold 12,682
inmates.
He said the Department of Correction has no say in when prisoners are
released
early on parole to make room for other inmates being sent to is prisons.
"The
Department of Corrections has no control over who is sent to us or how
long they
stay."
Corbett said the state Board of Pardons and Paroles determines which
inmates are
sent home early. He said the board has strict guidelines it must follow
in
deciding when inmates can be sent home early. "It has to be done per the
law."
Robert Oakes, assistant executive director of the Alabama Board of
Pardons and
Paroles, said releasing non-violent inmates on parole frees up prison
space and
saves money for the state. It costs $36 to $38 per day to keep an inmate
in
prison, but only $2 a day for them to be on parole.
He said it would be impossible for the state to require every inmate
convicted
of a serious crime to serve a lengthy prison sentence.
"Alabama cannot afford to build enough prisons to put everyone convicted
of a
felony in prison," he said. "There's not enough money in the general
fund to pay
for all the prisons we would need to do that."
Oakes said releasing an inmate on parole allows the state to have
oversight of
the prisoner's life for a period of time, such as sending them to a
transition
center before they return to their community, having them meet with a
parole
officer on a regular basis, or find a job and receive treatment for drug
addictions. Other conditions of their parole can include requiring them
undergo
random drug testing. Inmates who complete their sentence have no such
conditions
as part of their release.
"It's more cost effective, better for the state and better for society
to
release an inmate on parole," Oakes said.
Lauderdale County District Attorney Chris Connolly agrees it would be
impossible, based on a lack of prison space, to incarcerate everyone
convicted
of a felony. Nevertheless, he gets frustrated at times by the early
releases. He
said sometimes his office has barely had time to complete its paperwork
on a
conviction and sentencing before it receives a letter that the inmate is
being
considered for parole.
Connolly used the case of a Florence man convicted of vehicular homicide
in
February for killing a woman in a 2005 wreck. The man was sentenced to
five
years in prison and is already being considered for parole. Connolly
said he
will do all he can to ensure the man, Daniel Natjiblu Baker, is not
allowed to
leave prison early at a Nov. 26 parole hearing.
"It's very frustrating to have to start fighting to keep someone in
prison
within weeks after they were sent there," Connolly said.
Oakes said just because Baker is being considered for parole does not
mean he
will be released early. Of the about 10,000 inmates considered for
parole each
year, only 2,500 to 3,000 are granted.
"Fewer than one-third of the inmates released from prison each year are
released
on parole," he said. "More than one-third are released on a split
sentence that
was determined by a local judge and the remainder complete their entire
sentence."
Lauderdale County Circuit Court Judge Mike Jones said he gets frustrated
by how
quickly some inmates he sends to prison are returned home.
"I remember many years ago when somebody got a two-year sentence, they
would
spend pretty close to two years in prison," Jones said. "Then when the
prison
system started to get overcrowded and they started sending people home
early,
the judges would sentence someone they wanted to spend two years in
prison to
three years because they knew they would be get out early. They had to
inflate
sentences to compensate for the early releases.
"Now, to make sure someone you want to spend two years in prison serves
their
time before being released on parole, you have to give them 10 to 15
years. The
entire system has gotten totally out of kilter."
With more people being sentenced to prison every year, Jones fears the
problems
with Alabama's prison system will only get worse.
"We are already putting people on probation that don't need to be on
probation.
We are putting people on work release that don't need to be in work
release," he
said. "We are having to put them there because we have nowhere else to
put
them."
Graham doubts Alabama will build enough additional prisons to
accommodate the
overflow of inmates.
"Everybody wants to send people who commit crimes to prison, but most
people
don't want their taxes to increase so the state can build more prisons
and they
don't want them built in their community," Graham said. "It's a huge
problem
that's not going to be easy to solve."
Jones said the overcrowding problem is not limited to state prisons.
"My work-release program is essentially full. My jail is over full. The
probation office is overloaded," he said. "We're stretched to the limit
with no
end in sight."
Jail overcrowding is also an issue in Colbert County, according to
officials
there. Franklin County has built a new jail to provide space for an
overgrowing
number of inmates.
Connolly said the Alabama Sentencing Commission is working to solve the
overcrowding problem by establishing alternatives to prison, such as
drug courts
and community corrections programs. The board is also working on
developing
truth in sentencing legislation that would require someone sentenced to
10 years
in prison to serve 10 years. Someone sentenced to 20 years would serve
that many
years behind bars.
Lynda Flynt, executive director of the sentencing commission, said while
many of
the alternatives to prison have been implemented and are working well,
it will
be several years before truth in sentencing becomes law in Alabama.
The truth in sentencing law was scheduled to be implemented in 2009, but
Flynt
said it will be at least 2010 before it's adopted.
"Until we do something about our prison overpopulation and until we get
a new
women's prison, we just can't go there," she said. "Truth in sentencing
is
probably going to increase the number of people being incarcerated and
we must
have a place to put those people."
Besides freeing up space for the most violent offenders, Flynt said
using
community corrections programs - such as work-release - is less
expensive than
sentencing people convicted of non-violent crimes to prison.
Oakes expects the problem of not having space to house all the inmates
sent to
Alabama's prison system to get even worse in coming years and said more
prisoners, especially women convicted of non-violent crimes, will be
released on
parole to create space in prison for more violent offenders.
Jones said a good way to start reducing prison overcrowding in Alabama
would be
to become more proactive in preventing and treating drug abuse.
He said most of the people who come through his court have a drug
problem. Even
when they are not charged with a drug offense, many of them were under
the
influence of drugs when they commit a crime or stole something trying to
get
money to buy drugs.
Connolly estimates 95 percent of the crimes he prosecutes are
drug-related.
Graham agrees. "Now days, drug possession is pretty much as common as a
speeding ticket. A lot of people who steal did it so they could buy
drugs."
He and Connolly said drug court requires participants to undergo
rehabilitation
for their addictions. They must be tested frequently for drug use, meet
with
court officials monthly and take part in other intervention efforts.
Officials
say it is a good start toward reducing prison overcrowding and illegal
drug use.
Jones said the state needs to provide more money for drug courts.
"The state is going to have to put more resources into preventing drug
abuse and
into treatment for people who become addicted to drugs," Jones said.
"Until they
do that, we are going to be trapped in a never-ending downward spiral."
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