Why we can’t legislate change when it comes to reducing crime…


“The State of Indiana is poised to increase the prison time one must serve for murder and other violent crimes. New [guidelines will] raise the bar starting July 1, requiring violent criminals to serve at least 75 percent of their sentences. The current code has become notorious for allowing inmates to be released after serving just 50 percent of their sentences.”

There’s no data to say that “time behind bars” reduces the likelihood that someone will recommit a similar violent offense.  This is not reducing crime and making “the world a safer place.”

I have TWO CONCERNS with the news coverage on these upcoming changes, and some thoughts on what could be truly effective change…

 

CONCERN #1:  On the TV news piece on this new legislation, local police were interviewed and one officer stated “with these new sentencing guidelines, 25% more criminals will be off the streets.”

While that statement is mathematically precise, it is really saying nothing other than an answer to a simple (but meaningless) mathematics equation related to a body-count –

Q: how many people having been released early from prison would be on the ‘public streets’ at any given time?  

A: Yes, if they are in prison 25% longer, then it stands that at any given time, there would now be 25% less “on the streets…”

While that’s factually accurate, so what?

There is no data to support that leaving someone in prison longer will make a difference other than keeping more prisoners in prison than we do now!

These sentencing guidelines DO NOT

    • improve the overall effectiveness of our prison system, thus
    • improve our ability to “reform” someone, thus
    • reduce recidivism rates, thus
    • make the public streets safer

All we’ll be  doing is keeping 25% more people “on the other side of the prison wall.”

There is no data to support that leaving someone in prison longer will make a difference other than spending more taxpayer money than we do now!

These sentencing guidelines DO NOT

    • affect more or better change in an individual
    • improve public safety

The bottom line:  The streets are not 25% safer…we’ve just “delayed the inevitable,” and done so at a cost.

Did you know that it costs the same to house someone in prison for a year as it does to send someone to Harvard for a year!

The scarier bottom line: it’s a pretty steep cost for NO RESULT!

 

CONCERN #2:   On the news coverage on this new legislation specific cases are mentioned where violent crimes occurred and the suspects had been released early from prison.

    • In this online article, it described a three month span in a given city, where three murders occurred allegedly by convicted murderers (e.g. repeat offenders), and that two of these were released early from prison (both at ~50% of their full sentence).
    • In one case mentioned on TV,  the main suspect was released 3 months early from jail.

While these are are factually accurate descriptions, worse than meaningless statements, they are making dangerous implications that quite honestly are both unfounded and scary.

In other words, SO WHAT?

By tying the new guidelines to “actual cases,” without any other comparators, we’re being led to believe that there is historical evidence or actual proof that these guidelines

    • will REDUCE crime (because we can show that more time, less crime).
    • will PREVENT crime (because the threat of harsher sentences will keep people from committing crimes in the first place)

HELL NO.  HELL NO.

From the online article, all we know is that in a given time frame in one city, three murders occurred.  All we know is the recidivism rate for those three former prisoners is 100%.

Are we to believe that individuals are twice as likely to commit another violent crime if they’re released early?  NO!

Are we to believe that twice as many violent crimes are committed by repeat offenders who are released early?  NO!

From this sampling in the online article, we know nothing about about the new guidelines impact on recidivism…nothing about prison itself’s impact on recidivism…nothing about prison as a deterrent to crime!

    • Where there other convicted murderers in that city who served time who didn’t commit another murder (non-repeat offenders)?  We don’t know…
      • So we can’t draw any conclusions about the effectiveness of prison time on recidivism. 
    • Assuming there were, what ratio of those those non-repeat offenders served a partial sentence vs. full sentence?  We don’t know…
      • So we can’t draw any conclusions about the new sentencing guidelines on recidivism (e.g. was it better than 2:1?)
    • Were there other murders that occurred in that same time frame,  just not by former convicted murderers?  We don’t know…
      • So we can’t draw any conclusions about the effectiveness of prison in general on prevention!

And, if these were the ONLY three murders in the city at that time, then still all we sill know is the recidivism rate for those three former prisoners is 100%.

    • We can’t even say that prison time doesn’t reduce crime…we can’t draw any conclusions!

From the TV report, we know even less.  All we know, is the main suspect was released early from jail.

Are we to believe that had he not been released early, he wouldn’t have committed another violent crime?  NO!

All the data on recidivism would say that the individual would be just as likely to commit another similar violent crime…just 3 months later.

 

In these new stories, the reporters are implying that the guidelines would have changed the outcomes of recent deaths by shooting.  But there is no data to support this.

They are just ‘playing on our emotions” to lead us to believe that this simple solution will have an impact on crime.  It won’t.

 

IN CONCLUSION:  spending money “to keep doing the same thing for longer” with no data to support better results is DANGEROUSLY MISLEADING. It’s also the definition of insanity – banging your head against the same wall, expecting different results.

 

BUT while it’s great for me to point out the uselessness of their mathematically precision and the danger of their stories that play on our emotions,

DO I HAVE A BETTER ANSWER?  Hell Yes.

Instead of spending more money on  longer sentencing, we should spend that money in one of two ways:

    • reactively speaking, research better ways to help someone learn not to repeat a given undesirable behavior (i.e. recommit a similar crime)…which really means finding better things for that person to do with the same time interval…outside of prison!  This addresses criminal recidivism (and it probably involves us in community, not the government, to find the answers…)
    • proactively speaking, research solutions to address issues like poverty, substance abuse, child abuse, and social intolerance which lead to someone growing up to commit a violent crime….which really means finding ways to keep people out of prison in the first place.  This addresses crime prevention (and it probably involves us in community, not the government or schools, to find the answers…)

DO I HAVE AN EASIER ANSWER?  Hell No!

These are not simple solutions – we can’t just legislate change, throw money at the problem or lock people up and hope the problem solves itself.  We must get involved, and fundamentally “shift the conversation.”

Which is why you probably won’t like my answers…

…which is precisely why our legislators try these solutions.

They appear simple, keep the public happy, and get them re-elected.  

But they do NOT fundamentally adrress the problem with a better solution!

And, our legislators are NOT to blame!  We’re the ones at fault…because we fall for it!

But just because something is hard, doesn’t mean it’s not the right thing to do!

Resignation Letter from a First Year Public School Teacher


Powerful challenge to the pharoh’s narrative of our nation’s school system. Having just watched Mr Holland’s Opus I’m reminded of the difference one person can make when they challenge the system and create a different narrative…

Leslie Schwartz's avatarBUILD THE SCHOOL

DSC_0238-1 The utility closet where I was assigned to teach.

Dear Principal of Title 1 Elementary School,

Thank you for the opportunity to work in your school with your children, as you have referred to them. Thank you for reminding me to look you in the eye, for reminding me to never “turn my back on students” as I walk them in straight lines down the hall, for telling me that they will forget my name.

I will not make a difference in their lives, you said. Teachers don’t, you said. Thank you for telling me that you must “act like a dictator” at the school because you have to. Most of the teachers toe the line, handing in fake grades, spending their hours at night creating elaborate lesson plans to adhere to standards, spend hours creating bulletin boards to display student products and proof of real learning. Because I did…

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The Circle of Life…it’s real! We have Huxley and a Christmas Cactus to prove it…


Some may accuse me of looking for signs when there is nothing there, but I do not believe in coincidences.  I believe the Universe (or God) has ways of showing us how connected we are to every living thing around us. In doing so, She reminds us that we are Children of God – beloved and cherished…every hair on our head is known and counted, and we are invited to embrace what is good, holy and full of life.

In January of last year, our mom died suddenly of a heart attack in her home.  It was a shock to the family.  In fact, she was succeeded by her  mother, for whom we had just celebrated her 100 birthday as an extended family just 2 months prior.  This in and of itself was a gift from the Universe – that we could gather and reconnect for a joyous occasion first, rather than find ourselves reunited only for mom’s funeral.

My newest nephew was also born in October of last year, the same month my 100-year-old grandmother made her transition to the other side to join her husband and daughter, just one month shy of her 101’s birthday.  What an awesome “Circle of Life” to have Huxley Brown Fuqua come into the world, as Bronisław “Blanche” Trybala Schneider passed on.

My mom loved travel – it was her “dance” as I shared in my eulogy.  So, as a group of siblings, we agreed to go on a cruise to celebrate her life.  As it turns out, we timed the cruise to also celebrate my 18-year-old nephew’s high school graduation and transition to Penn State University, as well as my 46th birthday.  My brother and his family weren’t able to attend due to work and the obligations of young children, but my sister, brother-in-law and two nephews and niece had a phenomenal cruise aboard the NCL Breakway, docking in Bermuda.  We sailed the day after my nephew’s graduation, which I was able to attend in State College, PA.  And we were able to visit some close friends of my mom in New Jersey before sailing.  All in all, a pretty special event.

If all of this wasn’t enough of a wonderful connection and “Circle of Life…”  I talked with my sister today.  My mom loved plants, and had an overflowing collection of Christmas and Easter Cacti and Orchids.  None of her kids got her “green thumb” so we gifted them to her close friends in New Jersey, including Carol Webster – her dearest and closest friend.  Well, the weekend that we gathered for Andrew’s graduation and then set sail to celebrate mom’s “dance,” Carol noted that mom’s Christmas Cactus bloomed…for the first time since she passed.  (For the non-gardners… Christmas Cacti generally bloom once a year...and even then, are VERY difficult to finesse into bloom.  I had one for years and it never bloomed…until I left it to a friend who had a green thumb.  Some of us have the gift…

In this case, not only did Carol have the gift, but I believe Mom looked down and held that cactus until our celebratory cruise to let us know that she and Mee-maw were smiling down on us.  I also think this was her way of smiling down on Carol Webster, thanking her for her many years of friendship…especially during the trying times of mom’s denial and battle with untreated alcoholism.  I know it was hard for Carol at times (as it was for all of us…) to be around mom’s disease.  So, I’m grateful mom closed the circle and sent Carol this special blessing.

I love you mom.  I will always be your little boy…

 

 

PS:  Now, would you please find a way to shake up your stubborn German-blooded brother, and bring healing to that relationship you left here on Earth.  He is in so much pain – and I know he grieves your passing while the two of you were not speaking to one another…a hateful sibling fight that should have ended here on earth.  Please mom…bless him with forgiveness and healing.  I know you understand now what you and he should have done while you had the time on earth…be an Angel for us, and touch his heart.