The Hamilton Project, an economic policy initiative of the Brookings
Institution, published a memo earlier this month that highlighted the
economic costs of crime and incarceration in the United States.
While crime rates have fallen 45 percent since 1990, the memo said
that the incarceration rate is now at a "historically unprecedented
level," jumping 222 percent between 1980 and 2012. An
African-American man who never graduated from high school has a 70
percent likelihood of being imprisoned by his mid-30s; for similarly
educated white men, the rate is about 15 percent. And the United
States imprisons at a rate six times greater than most peer nations,
including those of the European Union, Japan, Israel, and Mexico.
The U.S. Department of Justice announced rules last month that would
give the Obama administration wider latitude to extend clemency or
reduce sentences for drug-related prisoners who don't present a
threat to public safety. In addition, the U.S. Sentencing Commission
voted unanimously in April to reduce sentencing guidelines for
certain nonviolent criminals, a move now before Congress that could
go into effect Nov. 1 if lawmakers don't take any further action.
Ronald S. Sullivan Jr. is a clinical professor of law and director of
the Criminal Justice Institute at Harvard Law School. The program
focuses on criminal practice, education, and research, and hosts a
teaching clinic for third-year law students to represent indigent
criminal defendants in local and juvenile courts. Sullivan spoke with
the Gazette about racial and national sentencing disparities, the
economic and social costs of mass incarceration, and the sentencing
reforms now under consideration.
GAZETTE: According to the memo, while the overall crime rate fell 45
percent between 1990 and 2012, the rate of imprisonment has spiked
222 percent between 1980 and 2012. What's behind this disparity? Is
that strictly the result of policy decisions like mandatory minimum
sentencing, repeat-offender laws, and the growth in for-profit
prisons? Or are other factors at work?
SULLIVAN: That's certainly a big piece of it. -- policy decisions
in respect of mandatory minimums drive the huge incarceration rate.
But there are other factors as well. What those factors are is the
subject of a lot of academic debate nowadays. And to be honest,
we're not exactly sure what it is. We do know that on a per-capita
basis the U.S. incarcerates more people than any country in the
world, including Rwanda, Russia, Cuba, all of the places one does not
associate with a robust tradition of liberty. And that's in many
ways shocking.
The theory would be -- with the high rates of incarceration that the
crime rate would go down and then that would be followed by less
incarceration because there just wouldn't be as many crimes
committed. But those numbers have gone in opposite directions.
Mandatory minimums simply don't explain all of it. Part of it, at
least I think, has to do with selective law enforcement — the
over-policing of certain neighborhoods, particularly minority
neighborhoods and poor neighborhoods. That is to say, if police are
there and looking for crimes, and over-police certain neighborhoods,
you're going to produce more defendants in particular areas. And if
the populations are drawn from poor populations, they're unable to
afford to be released on bail, they're unable to afford good
lawyers, and studies show that if you're not released on bail you
tend to stay in jail after sentencing. An unfortunate reality of the
United States is that far too often the justice you receive is a
function of how much money you have.
The prison-industrial complex is also an important factor. It
doesn't take an economist to know that if -- you make your money
by people going into prison, then there's going to be higher
incarceration rates. So I think that certainly plays a role as well.
GAZETTE: What are the areas of debate among scholars?
SULLIVAN: One explanation has to do with the United States'
articulated goals of punishment. Back in the '70s and before,
rehabilitation was an articulated goal of the criminal justice
system. The Supreme Court has said clearly now rehabilitation is no
longer a penological goal. We look at incapacitation, we look at
deterrence, and we look at retribution as goals that the penal system
serves. When you take rehabilitation out of the mix, then that
de-incentivizes the system from having shorter sentences because
there's no longer an affirmative goal of reintegrating people
meaningfully back into the community. That's one of the things that
scholars argue drive up the incarceration rate.
The other has to do with our system of elected judges in most states.
Judges who are elected, the argument runs, respond to democratic
pressures. We live in a political economy where people think that
more and harsher punishment is better, even though most competent
data suggests that longer sentences, after a certain point -- make
people worse as opposed to making them better. But you have
democratically elected judges who respond to the will of the people,
and if that will is for longer sentences, no matter how misinformed,
then judges oftentimes acquiesce to those pressures.
The other issue has to do with legislators. It, again, has to do with
the political economy in which we live. With this mantra of being
"tough on crime," legislators essentially race to see who can
draft legislation with the harshest, longest penalties. I think that
legislators don't believe that prosecutors will attempt to enforce
the most harsh provisions of particular laws, and in that sense, from
the vantage point of the legislator, it's sort of a win-win
situation: They can get the political credit for drafting an
incredibly harsh law, but not really have to deal with the effects
because the notion is the prosecutor will sort it out and will
recommend a fair sentence. That assumption, though, just hasn't
really been borne out in reality.
GAZETTE: The current incarceration gap between white men and
African-American men is particularly striking. Does that figure
surprise you, and what accounts for this gap? Is access to justice a
factor?
SULLIVAN: The figure does not surprise me, and it is unfortunate that
the figure does not surprise me. The figure reaffirms that race
insinuates itself into almost every aspect of our life still, and it
has a particular salience in the criminal justice system. -- Here we
see the effect of over-policing much more dramatically. In our
culture, unfortunately -- blackness is seen as a proxy for
criminality. So the same or similar conduct engaged in by a person of
color is seen through a lens that views that conduct as criminal,
where others simply are not taxed in the same way.
I would suspect if someone did some sort of empirical study of
underage alcohol use on a college campus versus underage alcohol use
in some section of Roxbury or Dorchester -- I would suspect that
there would be at least as much alcohol consumption on college
campuses as in the sections of Boston that I mentioned. But the
question has to do with the way in which laws are enforced. Whereas
on a campus like Harvard, for example, the authorities may use their
discretion to pour out the beer or issue a warning or that sort of
thing, young black men are arrested. So you can have very similar
conduct that occurs among different racial groups, but the effect of
the conduct is quite different in terms of the way in which the
authorities deal with it. -- And that's an indication of the power
that the police officers have, the discretionary authority that
police officers have. In most cases, they can choose to arrest or not
arrest -- can choose to put them in the car and take them to their
parent's home and say "stay out of trouble," or take them
downtown and put them into the criminal justice system. The startling
statistics you noted suggest that discretion is rarely exercised in a
way that favors African-American young people.
Access to justice is huge. The law, with respect to the ineffective
assistance of counsel, is laughably poor. What constitutes
constitutionally adequate representation is -- embarrassingly low.
-- Contrast that to a well-heeled law firm representing somebody.
More times than not, that person will get a much better result than a
poor person who does not have access to quality representation.
GAZETTE: The costs of mass incarceration appear to be felt most
acutely by African-American children. The memo reports that children
of African-American men who never graduated from high school have a
50 percent chance of seeing their father in jail by age 14, which
often leads to immediate and long-term financial, emotional, and
educational hardships. What needs to happen to make things equitable
for these children?
SULLIVAN: Sentencing reform would go a long way, and the data you
mention is important because it takes into account the collateral
effects of the criminal justice system. It's not just the sentence
itself, but it's all these other collateral matters that negatively
impact the lives of family and loved ones. In addition to family
instability and economic instability and the symbolic significance of
seeing a parent in jail, there are all sorts of other collateral
issues that arise from convictions. For certain types of convictions,
one can no longer live in government-subsidized housing, so now your
once-home is threatened, and it's not just the individual, but
it's anybody living in the home. I could tell you any number of
stories where a grandson is living with the grandmother, and the
grandmother is threatened with eviction because of drug arrests from
a grandson.
There's the issue of Pell grants: People convicted of certain
crimes are no longer eligible for a Pell grant, so if someone were to
be rehabilitated and wanted to go to college, then it becomes very
difficult if not impossible to afford it. There are all sorts of
immigration consequences depending on one's status, and just
general employment problems, as well. In Massachusetts particularly,
there has been a recent move for CORI reform. CORI is the acronym
that deals with a person's criminal record. When employers are
looking at the CORI and see a criminal record, even if a case is
ultimately dismissed or the defendant found not guilty, it still
prejudices them on the job market, so there are numerous collateral
consequences to involvement in the criminal justice system.
Sentencing reform would go a long way to mitigating the impact of
some of these collateral consequences.
But there also has to be a general rethinking of how we police in
America. I would hope that we could get at some of these issues prior
to people getting into the criminal justice system, so we should
begin to think much more seriously about being smart on crime and not
just being tough on crime. We should think about pretrial diversion
programs to move people away from the criminal justice system prior
to a case being opened against them that could haunt them for many,
many years to come. We should think seriously about expunging records
after a person has been outside of the criminal justice system with
no contacts for a reasonable period of time. One prior contact
shouldn't continue to exert these negative pressures on their job
prospects and living prospects and so forth.
We have to begin to think much more creatively about the education
system. The correlation between under-education and criminal
involvement is such that we can't ignore it. If we are providing
our young people with better educational opportunities, then that's
going to lessen the likelihood that they're going to see the
various criminal enterprises as a way to get out of their economic
predicament. It's got to be a multifaceted approach, but I'll be
happy to start with sentencing reform. That would go a long way.
GAZETTE: The U.S. incarceration rate is six times higher than 115
high-income peer countries. Why are we so out of sync with the rest
of the world?
SULLIVAN: I would go a little further. Not only is the United States
an outlier with respect to our peer countries, we're an outlier
with respect to all countries, and that is a scary thought. The crime
rate in the United States simply doesn't justify that outlier
status. In many ways, it is the $64,000 question — why we are like
that — and I don't know that I've got the perfect answer except
to say it's a complex of factors that include sentencing policy,
income inequality, and the heterogeneous nature of the United States.
And that last element manifests itself in disparate treatment --
including the criminal justice system. It's this complex of factors
that have worked together in a very nefarious kind of way to produce
a result that should make us as Americans embarrassed. We certainly
like to stand alone in many respects, but I don't know if we want
to be in the company of Russia and Cuba and [North] Korea in terms of
the harshness of our punishment.
GAZETTE: Following the decision by the U.S. Sentencing Commission in
2011 to reduce the required penalties for crack-related crimes, there
have been a number of proposed policy changes in the works. What
effect are they likely to have on reducing mass incarceration, and
what else needs to be done?
SULLIVAN: The sentencing commission has done some wonderful work in
terms of reducing the disparity between crack cocaine and powder
cocaine. There's still no proposal from the commission to make it
1:1, but rather, they've endeavored to reduce the disparity. And in
reducing the disparity, you will see some significant results, in
terms of people won't be in jail for these extraordinarily long
periods of time for quantities of crack that are similar to what
people possess who use powder cocaine. That's definitely going to
have a positive impact. But even more of an impact will be the
attorney general's new clemency policy that was announced a couple
of weeks ago. Here's a way where the executive -- is saying, even
if the legislature is not going to -- treat similarly situated
felons and misdemeanants the same, then the executive will use its
constitutional authority to right the scales. -- That's going to
have a dramatic effect, I predict, on incarceration. This only
applies to people convicted under federal law, but it will go a long
way to getting a lot of deserving people out of jail.
[As for the amendment now before Congress by the U.S. Sentencing
Commission to reduce sentencing guidelines on certain nonviolent drug
criminals, which would automatically go into effect Nov. 1 barring
further legislative action], you see politics at play here because in
this way the Congress feels protected in that they don't have to
affirmatively vote to reduce anything, but rather they can just do
nothing and it will happen. I'll take that as well.
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