California Votes to Reform Three Strikes Law
Huffington Post
After nearly 20 years and over $20 billion spent, California voters
have voted overwhelmingly to reform our state's draconian "three
strikes" law. The statewide ballot measure, Proposition 36,
delivered a two-to-one mandate (68.6%-31.4%) to close a controversial
loophole in the law so that life sentences can only be imposed when the
new felony conviction is "serious or violent."
Three strikes laws, often known as habitual offender laws, grew
out of the "tough on crime" era of the 1980s and 90s. Between 1993 and
1995, 24 states passed some kind of three strikes law, but California's
1994 three strikes ballot measure was especially harsh.
While the 1994 law
required the first and second strike to be either violent or serious,
any infraction could trigger a third strike and the life sentence that
went with it. Therefore, petty offenses - such as stealing a piece of
pizza - have led to life imprisonment for thousands of people.
Although 25 other states have passed three-strikes laws, only
California punishes minor crimes with a life sentence. In fact, 3,700
prisoners (more than 40 percent of the total third-strike population of
about 8,500) in the state are serving life for a third strike that was
neither violent nor serious. Because of its unique stringency,
California's habitual offender law has generated numerous legal
challenges based on the 8th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution barring cruel and unusual punishment.
Yesterday, voters in California put an end to one of the harshest and
least effective sentencing laws in the country. Proposition 36 ensures
that no more people are sentenced to life in prison for minor and
nonviolent drug law violations. In fact, implementation of the new law
will not only bring relief to petty offenders moving forward, but
inmates currently serving life sentences for non-serious, non-violent
crimes can apply for a new sentence. In these retroactive cases the
sentence can only be reduced if a judge determines that the individual
is no longer an unreasonable threat to public safety.
"Californians finally appear to be coming to their senses on the basic
question of who deserves to spend the rest of his or her life behind
bars," said Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy
Alliance. "Locking up people for life whose only recent offense was a
minor violation of the state's drug laws never made sense in terms of
public safety, finance or morality. California at last is rejoining the
civilized world."
As California set the trend for the passage of 3-strikes laws across
the country in the 1990s, we are optimistic that the passage of
Proposition 36 will also set the trend for rethinking these reactionary
and costly laws in other states. California incarcerates more people
than any other state in a country that imprisons more people than in any
other country, with 25% of the world's prisoners, but only 5% of the
world's population. There is still a long way to go to dismantle the
mass incarceration industrial complex we have built in the U.S. since
Nixon declared the war on drugs in 1971.
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