The politicians and public all want to be all tough on criminals and sh*t but then when the prisons get full and they have to pay a sh*t load more money to build more prisons and house all those people through higher taxes all then all the people then change their song and dance
3 hots and a cot is Cadillac so I guess that’s why they are putting our asses back out on the street
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California may lead prison-reform trend, ease '3 strikes'
Voters appear poised to approve measure to let nonviolent offenders out faster
More than a decade after California set a national trend toward longer sentences for habitual criminals with its three-strikes law, crime in the Golden State is down, prison costs are up - and voters are poised to soften the hardline stance.
A California ballot measure that would let some nonviolent offenders out of jail faster is the most high-profile example of what Adam Gelb, a criminal justice expert at the Pew Center, calls "a sea change across the country in attitudes on crime and punishment."
While the main financial backer of the campaign to pass the measure is a liberal billionaire, it has drawn support from religious conservatives, fiscal hawks and a broad array of constituencies who have supported "tough on crime" policies in the past.
California isn't the first state to revisit policies that have caused an explosion in inmate populations and in some cases jailed people for many decades over relatively minor infractions. In 2007, Texas faced more than $2 billion in new prison costs and chose instead to plow $240 million into alternatives such as treatment-oriented programs for nonviolent offenders.
more
California may set trend easing '3 strikes' law - politics | NBC News
3 hots and a cot is Cadillac so I guess that’s why they are putting our asses back out on the street
__________________________
California may lead prison-reform trend, ease '3 strikes'
Voters appear poised to approve measure to let nonviolent offenders out faster
More than a decade after California set a national trend toward longer sentences for habitual criminals with its three-strikes law, crime in the Golden State is down, prison costs are up - and voters are poised to soften the hardline stance.
A California ballot measure that would let some nonviolent offenders out of jail faster is the most high-profile example of what Adam Gelb, a criminal justice expert at the Pew Center, calls "a sea change across the country in attitudes on crime and punishment."
While the main financial backer of the campaign to pass the measure is a liberal billionaire, it has drawn support from religious conservatives, fiscal hawks and a broad array of constituencies who have supported "tough on crime" policies in the past.
California isn't the first state to revisit policies that have caused an explosion in inmate populations and in some cases jailed people for many decades over relatively minor infractions. In 2007, Texas faced more than $2 billion in new prison costs and chose instead to plow $240 million into alternatives such as treatment-oriented programs for nonviolent offenders.
more
California may set trend easing '3 strikes' law - politics | NBC News
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