Too many laws, too many prisoners via the Economist
THREE pickup trucks pulled up outside George Norris’s home in Spring, Texas. Six armed police in flak jackets jumped out. Thinking they must have come to the wrong place, Mr Norris opened his front door, and was startled to be shoved against a wall and frisked for weapons. He was forced into a chair for four hours while officers ransacked his house. They pulled out drawers, rifled through papers, dumped things on the floor and eventually loaded 37 boxes of Mr Norris’s possessions onto their pickups. They refused to tell him what he had done wrong. “It wasn’t fun, I can tell you that,” he recalls.
Mr Norris was 65 years old at the time, and a collector of orchids. He eventually discovered that he was suspected of smuggling the flowers into America, an offence under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species. This came as a shock. He did indeed import flowers and sell them to other orchid-lovers. And it was true that his suppliers in Latin America were sometimes sloppy about their paperwork. In a shipment of many similar-looking plants, it was rare for each permit to match each orchid precisely.
In March 2004, five months after the raid, Mr Norris was indicted, handcuffed and thrown into a cell with a suspected murderer and two suspected drug-dealers. When told why he was there, “they thought it hilarious.” One asked: “What do you do with these things? Smoke ’em?”
He pleaded innocent. But an undercover federal agent had ordered some orchids from him, a few of which arrived without the correct papers. For this, he was charged with making a false statement to a government official, a federal crime punishable by up to five years in prison. Since he had communicated with his suppliers, he was charged with conspiracy, which also carries a potential five-year term.
As his legal bills exploded, Mr Norris reluctantly changed his plea to guilty, though he still protests his innocence. He was sentenced to 17 months in prison. After some time, he was released while his appeal was heard, but then put back inside. His health suffered: he has Parkinson’s disease, which was not helped by the strain of imprisonment. For bringing some prescription sleeping pills into prison, he was put in solitary confinement for 71 days. The prison was so crowded, however, that even in solitary he had two room-mates.
A long love affair with lock and key
Justice is harsher in America than in any other rich country. Between 2.3m and 2.4m Americans are behind bars, roughly one in every 100 adults. If those on parole or probation are included, one adult in 31 is under “correctional” supervision. As a proportion of its total population, America incarcerates five times more people than Britain, nine times more than Germany and 12 times more than Japan. Overcrowding is the norm. Federal prisons house 60% more inmates than they were designed for. State lock-ups are only slightly less stuffed.
The system has three big flaws, say criminologists. First, it puts too many people away for too long. Second, it criminalises acts that need not be criminalised. Third, it is unpredictable. Many laws, especially federal ones, are so vaguely written that people cannot easily tell whether they have broken them.

In 1970 the proportion of Americans behind bars was below one in 400, compared with today’s one in 100. Since then, the voters, alarmed at a surge in violent crime, have demanded fiercer sentences. Politicians have obliged. New laws have removed from judges much of their discretion to set a sentence that takes full account of the circumstances of the offence. Since no politician wants to be tarred as soft on crime, such laws, mandating minimum sentences, are seldom softened. On the contrary, they tend to get harder.
Some criminals belong behind bars. When a habitual rapist is locked up, the streets are safer. But the same is not necessarily true of petty drug-dealers, whose incarceration creates a vacancy for someone else to fill, argues Alfred Blumstein of Carnegie Mellon University. The number of drug offenders in federal and state lock-ups has increased 13-fold since 1980. Some are scary thugs; many are not.
Michelle Collette of Hanover, Massachusetts, sold Percocet, a prescription painkiller. “I was planning to do it just once,” she says, “but the money was so easy. And misery. Before long, she was taking 20-30 a day.I thought: it’s not heroin.” Then she became addicted to her own wares. She was unhappy with her boyfriend, she explains, but did not want to split up with him, because she did not want their child to grow up fatherless, as she had. So she popped pills to numb the
When Ms Collette and her boyfriend, who also sold drugs, were arrested in a dawn raid, the police found 607 pills and $901 in cash. The boyfriend fought the charges and got 15 years in prison. In a plea bargain Ms Collette was sentenced to seven years, of which she served six.
“I don’t think this is fair,” said the judge. “I don’t think this is what our laws are meant to do. It’s going to cost upwards of $50,000 a year to have you in state prison. Had I the authority, I would send you to jail for no more than one year…and a [treatment] programme after that.” But mandatory sentencing laws gave him no choice.
Massachusetts is a liberal state, but its drug laws are anything but. It treats opium-derived painkillers such as Percocet like hard drugs, if illicitly sold. Possession of a tiny amount (14-28 grams, or ½-1 ounce) yields a minimum sentence of three years. For 200 grams, it is 15 years, more than the minimum for armed rape. And the weight of the other substances with which a dealer mixes his drugs is included in the total, so 10 grams of opiates mixed with 190 grams of flour gets you 15 years.
Ms Collette underwent drug treatment before being locked up, and is now clean. But in prison she found she was pregnant. After going through labour shackled to a hospital bed, she was allowed only 48 hours to bond with her newborn son. She was released in March, found a job in a shop, and is hoping that her son will get used to having her around.
Rigid sentencing laws shift power from judges to prosecutors, complains Barbara Dougan of Families Against Mandatory Minimums, a pressure-group. Even the smallest dealer often has enough to trigger a colossal sentence. Prosecutors may charge him with selling a smaller amount if he agrees to “reel some other poor slob in”, as Ms Dougan puts it. He is told to persuade another dealer to sell him just enough drugs to trigger a 15-year sentence, and perhaps to do the deal near a school, which adds another two years.
Severe drug laws have unintended consequences. Less than half of American cancer patients receive adequate painkillers, according to the American Pain Foundation, another pressure-group. One reason is that doctors are terrified of being accused of drug-trafficking if they over-prescribe. In 2004 William Hurwitz, a doctor specialising in the control of pain, was sentenced to 25 years in prison for prescribing pills that a few patients then resold on the black market. Virginia’s board of medicine ruled that he had acted in good faith, but he still served nearly four years.
Half the states have laws that lock up habitual offenders for life. In some states this applies only to violent criminals, but in others it applies even to petty ones. Some 3,700 people who committed neither violent nor serious crimes are serving life sentences under California’s “three strikes and you’re out” law. In Alabama a petty thief called Jerald Sanders was given a life term for pinching a bicycle. Alabama’s judges are elected, as are those in 32 other states. This makes them mindful of public opinion: some appear in campaign advertisements waving guns and bragging about how tough they are.

Many Americans assume that white-collar criminals get off lightly, but many do not. Granted, they may be hard to catch and can often afford good lawyers. But federal prosecutors can file many charges for what is essentially one offence. For example, they can count each e-mail sent by a white-collar criminal in the course of his criminal activity as a separate case of wire fraud, each of which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years. The decades soon add up. Sentences depend partly on the size of the loss and the number of people affected, so if you work for a big, publicly traded company, you break a rule and the share-price drops, watch out.
Jim Felman, a defence lawyer in Tampa, Florida, says America is conducting “an experiment in imprisoning first-time non-violent offenders for periods of time previously reserved only for those who had killed someone”. One of Mr Felman’s clients, a fraudster called Sholam Weiss, was sentenced to 845 years. “I got it reduced to 835,” sighs Mr Felman. Faced with such penalties, he says, the incentive to co-operate, which means to say things that are helpful to the prosecution, is overwhelming. And this, he believes, “warps the truth-seeking function” of justice.
Innocent defendants may plead guilty in return for a shorter sentence to avoid the risk of a much longer one. A prosecutor can credibly threaten a middle-aged man that he will die in a cell unless he gives evidence against his boss. This is unfair, complains Harvey Silverglate, the author of “Three Felonies a Day: How the Feds Target the Innocent”. If a defense lawyer offers a witness money to testify that his client is innocent, that is bribery. But a prosecutor can legally offer something of far greater value—his freedom—to a witness who says the opposite. The potential for wrongful convictions is obvious.
Badly drafted laws create traps for the unwary. In 2006 Georgia Thompson, a civil servant in Wisconsin, was sentenced to 18 months in prison for depriving the public of “the intangible right of honest services”. Her crime was to award a contract (for travel services) to the best bidder. A firm called Adelman Travel scored the most points (on an official scale) for price and quality, so Ms Thompson picked it. She ignored a rule that required her to penalize Adelman for a slapdash presentation when bidding. For this act of common sense, she served four months. (An appeals court freed her.)
The “honest services” statute, if taken seriously, “would seemingly cover a salaried employee’s phoning in sick to go to a ball game,” fumes Antonin Scalia, a Supreme Court justice. The Supreme Court ruled recently that the statute was so vague as to be unconstitutional. It did not strike it down completely, but said it should be applied only in cases involving bribery or kickbacks. The challenge was brought by Enron’s former boss, Jeff Skilling, who will not go free despite his victory, and Conrad Black, a media magnate released this week on bail pending an appeal, who may.
There are over 4,000 federal crimes, and many times that number of regulations that carry criminal penalties. When analysts at the Congressional Research Service tried to count the number of separate offenses on the books, they were forced to give up, exhausted. Rules concerning corporate governance or the environment are often impossible to understand, yet breaking them can land you in prison. In many criminal cases, the common-law requirement that a defendant must have a mens rea (ie, he must or should know that he is doing wrong) has been weakened or erased.
“The founders viewed the criminal sanction as a last resort, reserved for serious offenses, clearly defined, so ordinary citizens would know whether they were violating the law. Yet over the last 40 years, an unholy alliance of big-business-hating liberals and tough-on-crime conservatives has made criminalisation the first line of attack—a way to demonstrate seriousness about the social problem of the month, whether it’s corporate scandals or e-mail spam,” writes Gene Healy, a libertarian scholar. “You can serve federal time for interstate transport of water hyacinths, trafficking in unlicensed dentures, or misappropriating the likeness of Woodsy Owl.”
“You’re (probably) a federal criminal,” declares Alex Kozinski, an appeals-court judge, in a provocative essay of that title. Making a false statement to a federal official is an offence. So is lying to someone who then repeats your lie to a federal official. Failing to prevent your employees from breaking regulations you have never heard of can be a crime. A boss got six months in prison because one of his workers accidentally broke a pipe, causing oil to spill into a river. “It didn’t matter that he had no reason to learn about the [Clean Water Act’s] labyrinth of regulations, since he was merely a railroad-construction supervisor,” laments Judge Kozinski.
Society wants retributionSuch cases account for only a tiny share of the Americans behind bars, but they still matter. When so many people are technically breaking the law, it is up to prosecutors to decide whom to pursue. No doubt most prosecutors choose wisely. But members of unpopular groups may not find that reassuring. Ms Thompson, for example, was prosecuted just before an election, at a time when allegations of public corruption in Wisconsin were in the news. Some prosecutors, such as Eliot Spitzer, the disgraced ex-governor of New York, have built political careers by nailing people whom voters don’t like, such as financiers.
Prison deters? Not much, not the worst
Some people argue that the system works: that crime has fallen in the past two decades because the bad guys are either in prison or scared of being sent there. Caged thugs cannot break into your home. Bernie Madoff’s 150-year sentence for running a Ponzi scam should deter imitators. And indeed the crime rate continues to drop, despite the recession, as Michael Rushford of the Criminal Justice Legal Foundation, an advocacy group, points out. This, he says, is because habitual criminals face serious consequences. Some research supports him: after raking through decades of historical data, John Donohue of Yale Law School estimates that a 10% increase in imprisonment brings a 2% reduction in crime.
Others disagree. Using more recent data, Bert Useem of Purdue University and Anne Piehl of Rutgers University estimate that a 10% increase in the number of people behind bars would reduce crime by only 0.5%. In the states that currently lock up the most people, imprisoning more would actually increase crime, they believe. Some inmates emerge from prison as more accomplished criminals. And raising the incarceration rate means locking up people who are, on average, less dangerous than the ones already behind bars. A recent study found that, over the past 13 years, the proportion of new prisoners in Florida who had committed violent crimes fell by 28%, whereas those inside for “other” crimes shot up by 189%. These “other” crimes were non-violent ones involving neither drugs nor theft, such as driving with a suspended licence.
And now the reckoning, in dollars
Crime is a young man’s game. Muggers over 30 are rare. Ex-cons who go straight for a few years generally stay that way: a study of 88,000 criminals by Mr Blumstein found that if someone was arrested for aggravated assault at the age of 18 but then managed to stay out of trouble until the age of 22, the risk of his offending was no greater than that for the general population. Yet America’s prisons are crammed with old folk. Nearly 200,000 prisoners are over 50. Most would pose little threat if released. And since people age faster in prison than outside, their medical costs are vast. Human Rights Watch, a lobby-group, talks of “nursing homes with razor wire”.
Jail is expensive. Spending per prisoner ranges from $18,000 a year in Mississippi to about $50,000 in California, where the cost per pupil is but a seventh of that. “[W]e are well past the point of diminishing returns,” says a report by the Pew Center on the States. In Washington state, for example, each dollar invested in new prison places in 1980 averted more than nine dollars of criminal harm (using a somewhat arbitrary scale to assign a value to not being beaten up). By 2001, as the emphasis shifted from violent criminals to drug-dealers and thieves, the cost-benefit ratio reversed. Each new dollar spent on prisons averted only 37 cents’ worth of harm.
Since the recession threw their budgets into turmoil, many states have decided to imprison fewer people, largely to save money. Mississippi has reduced the proportion of their sentences that non-violent offenders are required to serve from 85% to 25%. Texas is making greater use of non-custodial penalties. New York has repealed most mandatory minimum terms for drug offences. In all, the number of prisoners in state lock-ups fell by 0.3% in 2009, the first fall since 1972. But the total number of Americans behind bars still rose slightly, because the number of federal prisoners climbed by 3.4%.
A less punitive system could work better, argues Mark Kleiman of the University of California, Los Angeles. Swift and certain penalties deter more than harsh ones. Money spent on prisons cannot be spent on more cost-effective methods of crime-prevention, such as better policing, drug treatment or probation. The pain that punishment inflicts on criminals themselves, on their families and on their communities should also be taken into account.
“Just by making effective use of things we already know how to do, we could reasonably expect to have half as much crime and half as many people behind bars ten years from now,” says Mr Kleiman. “There are a thousand excuses for failing to make that effort, but not one good reason.”






All you little shills can look at this and grin……boy, you all sure got the “roaches” where you want ‘em, huh?
http://www.brasschecktv.com/videos/bad-guys/black-bloc-protesters-serve-the-elite-1.html
treasonous filth.
I was in jail when I was 18 for 6 months for simple drug possession. Here I learned how to steal cars and pick locks. I came out with a much higher level of “criminal knowledge” than if I ever went in. Jail is a joke for anyone who doesn’t commit a violent crime, its only makes one worse. We would be so much better off if people would not involve the government. Let people make their own decisions and solve their own problems
the instruments used to put these people behind bars are not Laws at all. they are legals..codes, statutes & ordinances. These are mostly victimless crimes. File a fee schedule and challenge the jurisdiction. The corporation DBA United States of America D.C. has no jurisdiction over free people only citizens.
Offending who? The Law is Offensive. The USA has become the least free country on earth. No respectable person can enforce these laws. It is a crime against humanity.
@Smokey,
I have a regular customer that makes a good living walking professional/blue collar folks through the paperwork to achieve that goal. Very smart fellow, so sharp, if you’re not on your toes, you begin getting a headache trying to keep up with him.
This is the most disgusting thing about what this country has become.. It has been hijacked and used to finance police state on ordinary citizens that have committed no crimes.. No victim no crime… That should be an amendment. Oh wait!!! It’s implied in our constitution and bill of rights.. LEARN IT.. LIVE IT.. LOVE IT.. BELIEVE IT!! SUCKAH!!
Unconstitutional and very disconcerting;
http://www.brasschecktv.com/videos/offensive-technology/congress-allows-30000-drones-to-spy-on-americans-.html
I’ll agree that we put people in jail for some stupid reason.. But with 1.4 Million people arrested a year for drunk driving alone… I would hope many of them get a few days behind bars. 15K people are killed a year by drunks. About 15k murders a year.. which carry a life sentence in most states. http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/cjis/ucr/crime-in-the-u.s/2010/crime-in-the-u.s.-2010/tables/10tbl01.xls Here are some stats… Let’s pick 1. Forcable rape. Since 1991, over 1.7MILLION. In my state 1st degre rape is life. Robbery. 9.7 MILLION over the 20 year period. I think these are crimes we all agree on that deserve a good prison sentence.
Pulling a sob story out of the woodwork that shows a problem in 1 case, shouldn’t be used to ATTEMPT to point out that we have some sort of problem. Statistics tell a different story. We have ALOT of bad people out there and personally, I don’t mind my tax dollars paying for an extended stay in prison, personally would prefer my tax dollars spent on a few more chairs and gas chambers.
@PSOSGT,
Are we the EVILEST people in the whole WORLD? I ask because if you take the number of prisoners in any given country in the world and standardize it by dividing by 100,000 inhabitants, the U.S.A. is still by FAR the country with the most people LOCKED-UP. I believe it’s about 800 prisoners / 100,000 inhabitants…way more than the U.K., The Netherlands, Germany, France, Switzerland, Norway, Canada, per 100,000 inhabitants just to give you some examples.
Again: are the AMERICANS the EVILEST people in the whole world? There should be EVIL people everywhere in the world but…WHY us? Why we deserve to be locked up for…STUPID reasons based on: MALICIOUS LAWS made by corrupt Lawmakers…LAWS that you and your buddies en-FORCE regardless.
Have you forgotten the 2 Pennsylvania JUDGES that were receiving KICKBACKS from a PRISON OWNER to lock-up youths for…MISDEMEANORS?
PSOSGT:
Couldn’t the below quote and link provided be the REAL reason why we have “so many EVILS” and…therefore, TOO many PRISONERS in this country?
READ THIS: (quote)
http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2012/02/09/the-myth-of-economic-inequality
The gap between the rich and the poor is growing in the United States and has been for decades. The topic came to the forefront of the national debate last year with the rise of Occupy Wall Street.
Without question, income inequality has grown substantially in the United States. According to an October report from the Congressional Budget Office, a nonpartisan agency that provides economic data to Congress, real income for the top 1 percent of the population grew by 275 percent between 1979 and 2007. Meanwhile, household income for the middle 60 percent of the population grew by just under 40 percent, and for the bottom 20 percent, it grew by just 18 percent. That’s a wide disparity…
Likewise, while income gaps continue to grow, economic mobility—the ability to move up (or down) the income ladder—is very limited.
Even while a vast majority of Americans are earning more than their parents did, many Americans find it difficult to move from their places on the economic ladder, says Erin Currier, project manager at Pew’s Economic Mobility Project, which studies economic opportunity in the U.S.
@carlos. I would think that we would have to look past the numbers and look at each country and other statistics. England has the HIGHEST crime rate of developed nations in rape, burglary and robbery. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/law-and-order/7922755/England-has-worse-crime-rate-than-the-US-says-Civitas-study.html What are the prison sentences handed down to people for certain crimes? We might put people away longer, so they count longer. We also have a 3 strikes policy in some states, do those countries? We have a lower crime rate than england, yet we send more to prison. The question is why..
I think statistics are good, but they don’t tell the complete picture without other stats and facts. Do I think that too many people are sent to prison for dope. Yes. Simple solution. Don’t sell dope.
We have to reverse this negative trend to prosecute anything from jaywalking to filming the police. Filming our public servants, on our payroll on our streets is an offense to the police? Things have to change because we will not live in a police state, we will NOT permit it!
@PSOSGT,
If the U.K. has a higher crime rate than that of the U.S.A., how come the PROPORTION [ # of prisoners / 100,000 inhabitants ] is LOWER than that of the U.S.A.? I’m curious…
Let me rephrase it: Why do WE put more people in PRISON than other DEVELOPED countries? Does it have something to do with the INDUSTRIAL-PRISON complex and its stockholders?
Lastly, I have TWO personal questions for you:
[A] Is it true that you COPS have a monthly ARREST QUOTE that you have to meet in order to keep your jobs?
[B] Do you internally ENJOY when you put someone in HANDCUFFS?
Be honest with your answers.
Thanks
The reason we have so many in prison, is simple. We have laws that PROTECT our law breakers. Someone who is convicted of murder goes to death row, but because of appeals, protests, and beauracracy, they sit in a cell for another 10-15 years. In a lot of cases, they die of old age before they ever see a needle.
Again, other countries, don’t have this. Go to the middle East, if you steal, you don’t get probation, you get your hand chopped off. Does anyone remember the kid that tagged in Asia??? No probation, no cell, he got caned!!! Other countries don’t have as many people in jails because their system deals with them differently and less humanely. Imagine the uproar here if we did that???
Be careful what you complain about, it can always get worse!!!
@wow:
How DARE you to make such comparisons? Comparing the U.S.A. to THIRD WORLD countries!
If you are going to compare, you MUST compare APPLES to APPLES, NOT APPLES to…ORANGES!
Why don’t you compare this…“LOVELY” country called the U.S.A. to Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Switzerland, The Netherlands, etc. which are industrialized countries with high standards of living like here. These kind of comparisons are meaningful but, comparing the U.S.A. to THIRD WORLD Theocracies like Iran, Saudi Arabia, or poor countries like, Vietnam, N. Korea, Indonesia, Thailand makes NOT sense at all.
I wouldn’t mind if I was forced to move from here to Norway, Sweden, Finland, Switzerland or other Industrialized country should the need arise because, those countries HAVE better social systems for their people than we do and…they do NOT have this MASS INCARCERATIONS like we…DO
Next time, THINK HARD before you post!
Thanks
@PSOSGT:
You say:
“Pulling a sob story out of the woodwork that shows a problem in 1 case, shouldn’t be used to ATTEMPT to point out that we have some sort of problem. Statistics tell a different story.”
It’s funny because you’re doing the exact opposite – pulling a few anecdotes out and claiming they’re the rule rather than the exception. Nobody is calling for letting murderers and rapists loose on the streets. Nobody here is asking to legalize driving under the influence (of alcohol or anything else). Even anarchists recognize that something must be done about these things (though we have some other, arguably better ideas, about what to do with the fuckers depending on who you ask).
What is being called for in this article is a re-evaluation of the imprisonment of non-violent offenders who make up a HUGE portion of the prison population, and a reevaluation of the United States’ pants-on-head retarded approach to “rehabilitation”.
Next time you decide to throw around accusations of distortion of fact, you’d better check your own first.
@Carlos – Wasn’t a comparison. Just pointing out that we PROTECT our convicted people and that the process here is much more drawn out, therefore, we have more people in prisons waiting on court, appeals, sentencing, etc…
If it was a comparison, why do I have to pick specific countries to compare to? The statistics that everyone always point to, show prison populations in all countries, they are not differentiated. Stats can be scewed any way you want them to be, if only compared to certain countries.
Please, by all means MOVE!!! You obviously don’t like it here. I noticed that all the countries that you want to compare to the United States have the most lenient drug laws anywhere. Weird.
@wow :
QUOTING from your last post:
“I noticed that all the countries that you want to compare to the United States have the most lenient drug laws anywhere. Weird.”
What have the U.S.A. gained in 40 YEARS of “War on Drugs” beyond having the largest INCARCERATION RATE in the WHOLE WORLD? Have the U.S.A. stopped the drug consumption by jailing every single John Doe on the street because he’s smoking pot? Have the U.S.A. stopped the drug shipments coming to the U.S. from Mexico, Colombia, Bolivia and other parts of the world?
Are you better off today than you were in 1972 when the infamous “War on Drugs” started?
At least, those ADVANCED and INDUSTRIALIZED European countries do NOT have the problems we have, pretending to be the most “PURITAN” country in the whole frigging world…
Oh…and their CRIME rates are LOWER than here…
Carlos
@WOW,
I have some home-work for you. There is a very interesting reading about which countries of the world are LESS CORRUPT and which ones are MORE CORRUPT…
Even when our “LOVELY” U.S.A. sits at spot #24, there are 23 spots above the U.S. that are by far LESS CORRUPT than America…Guess what? Some of those countries were listed by me in previous posts…
See HERE:
http://cpi.transparency.org/cpi2011/results/
Carlos
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