No. 31231 State of West Virginia v. Joseph L. Watkins
Starcher, C. J., concurring:
However, I write separately because the sentence of incarceration in this case - although legally permissible - vividly illustrates the most important issue facing West Virginia's criminal justice system: our failure to use economical, non-incarceration, community-based sanctions for criminal misconduct.
West Virginia taxpayers are being required to spend large amounts of money
on putting people in prisons and jails, at a time when our State's budget is said to be in
crisis. At the same time, new technology like electronic bracelets (even with satellite
tracking) will allow us to monitor offenders and protect society at a fraction of the cost of
incarceration. And instead of sitting in a $20,000-a-year cell at the taxpayers' expense, we
can get our offenders out working, to clean our streets and parks; and paying restitution to
their victims.
The wasteful, unnecessary use of imprisonment is not limited to West Virginia. It is a national problem. In 1974, there were 1,819,000 U.S. adults who had at some time been incarcerated in a state or federal prison; that was 1.3% of our nation's population. Twenty-seven years later, in 2001, that number had more than doubled - to 5,618,000, or 2.7%.
In 1974, 8.7% of black Americans had ever been in prison. In 2001, the
number is 16.6%. If current incarceration rates remain unchanged, Bureau of Justice
statistics predict that one in three black males, one in six Hispanic males, and one in
seventeen white males will go to prison sometime during their lives.
Put another way, at current rates, an astonishing 6.6% of all persons born in
the United States in 2001 will go to state or federal prison during their lifetime; this is up
from 5.2% in 1991, and from 1.9% in 1974.
Are we a safer society than we were in 1974? I don't think so.
These numbers are horrifying. They reflect our society's utterly failed reliance
on imprisonment to try to deal with the problem of hard drugs, and politicians who are
playing the knee-jerk politics of fear and vengeance.
We who have worked daily in the criminal justice system know what we need
to deal with offenders effectively and economically, and it sure isn't more incarceration.
We need more treatment programs for drug addicts, and more day reporting
centers and community corrections centers.
We need high-tech home confinement and offender monitoring systems, and we need a limited amount of secure imprisonment, with good in-house rehabilitation services, for the violent people who pose a true danger.
We need to get rid of mandatory minimum sentences, because they clog our
jails and prisons with offenders who don't need that level of security.
The sentence in this case of a year in jail for a dog-stealer means that tens of
thousands of dollars of taxpayer money will go to feed, clothe, house and give medical care
to a person who should be outside, on supervised probation, working, to pay his debt to
society and to his victim.
Multiply this offender's incarceration sentence by hundreds of other similar
cases, and we can see why West Virginia is spending money that we need - for teachers and
nurses and doctors and roads and bridges and schools - on wasteful, unnecessary
imprisonment.