Let’s
be clear: the 3 strikes crime bill being proposed for Massachusetts
has nothing to do with the stopping or reduction of crime.
If not for the kind of long-enduring negative impacts on
people and families, and communities, the proposal could
be described as silly. We cannot describe it as silly,
however, because there is a proven history of destruction
of lives and communities associated with 3 strikes provisions
in other states, at the same time that it has proven worthless
in the reduction of crime. Enactment of this kind of legislation
will only lead to potential increase in the state’s prison
population and unfairly burden impoverished people, but
especially Black and Latino people, and especially young
people. It is a proposal that contradicts recent and widespread
efforts to reform the Criminal Offender Record Information
(CORI),
a system that is being acknowledged as a failure by increasing
numbers of people and legislators in Massachusetts.
A report issued by the Justice Policy
Institute, Three Strikes
and You’re Out, reports that such legislation has
led to many people being incarcerated for relatively minor
crimes. In California, two-thirds of all persons imprisoned
under its 3-Strikes law, committed nonviolent crimes. Based
on FBI crime rates reported, it was found that between 1993
and 2002, violent crime in 3-Strike states fell by 33%;
in non 3-Strike states, however, crime decreased by 34.3%.
In lieu of the failure of the 3-Strikes approach as crime
prevention, why are our state legislators considering a
strategy that has been discarded by many organizations and
professionals involved with designing anti-crime strategies?
And, why are our state legislators so anxious to adopt legislation
that will have the effect of increasing racial divisions
in the state? The adoption of this kind of law will doubtless
be ‘colorblind’. But in its implementation it will adversely
affect communities of color which tend to have significantly
greater numbers of people without the resources to pay for
defending themselves, or their children, in response to
accusations of crime. And, let’s be honest here: or have
the resources to change or challenge, or even delete records
of crime.
This is not a game. It is irresponsible at worst and goblin
at best, to propose that - just like in baseball - when
a hitter has three strikes he is out. What a seductive
but dangerous analogy, and arbitrary template, for the administration
of justice and fairness.
Acknowledgement: This article first appeared in a special
issue published in Boston’s Blackstonian,
“Say No to 3 Strikes Law in Massachusetts” (February/March
2012).
BlackCommentator.com Editorial
Board Member Dr. James Jennings, PhD is a Professor of urban
and environmental policy and planning at Tufts University. Click
here to contact
Dr. Jennings.
|