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US States eleasing inmates to save money

US States 
eleasing inmates to save money
folder_openInternational News access_time15 years ago
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Source: Hizbollah Site Staff, 07-09-2009


US States 
eleasing inmates to save money

With more than 30 states slipping into a financial sinkhole and in the midst of continuous repercussions of a global economic crisis that swept across the United States as well as the entire world, governments take hard and sometimes surprising decisions and scramble to save money.

A report says that dozens of prisoners will be released from prison as mandatory sentencing laws are relaxed, as long as their freedom is expected to save the cash-strapped state money.

California, with the nation's second largest prison system, is considering perhaps the most dramatic solution, releasing 40,000 inmates to save money, the Los Angeles Times reported.
Some other states are revising mandatory-sentencing laws that locked up nonviolent offenders; others are recalculating prison time.

Nearly one-sixth of Colorado's prison population will accelerate parole.
Oregon has increased by 10 percent the time inmates get off their sentences for good behavior. Early release has already been granted to more than 30,000 prisoners in Kentucky.

"When you're not having budget troubles, that's when we implemented many of these lengthy drug sentences and zero-tolerance policies [that] really didn't work," said Russ Marlan, a spokesman for the corrections department in Michigan.

Over the last 20 years prison, budgets have grown steadily but a recent survey has shown that 26 states have cut their corrections budgets this year. The reductions range from putting in energy efficient light bulbs to changes like early release.

The parole board has started considering whom to let out, but the Republicans have overruled the plan as too risky.

"It's inevitable these people will commit crimes," said Colorado state Senate Minority Leader Josh Penry.


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