California eases prison crowding after
years of trying
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[January 30, 2015]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - After years
of controversy and legal trouble because of overcrowding in California's
mammoth prison system, the state's inmate population dipped below the
maximum level set by a federal court for the first time on Thursday.
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It is not yet clear whether the inmate count of 113,463 released
Thursday, about 300 below the cap set by a panel of three federal
judges, represents a permanent thinning of the prison population or
is just a temporary reprieve for the state, which for years fought
orders to bring the numbers down.
"It's an important milestone," said Michael Bien, a lead attorney in
lawsuits aimed at forcing the state to reduce crowding that have
gone all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. "But it doesn't mean
everything is fixed."
The administration of Democratic Governor Jerry Brown was
circumspect about the population change, which was released as part
of the state's regular weekly inmate count Thursday.
"This is a snapshot in time," said California Department of
Corrections and Rehabilitation spokeswoman Deborah Hoffman. "We’re
clearly making progress, but much work remains.”
Bien said the biggest driver in the population reduction was a new
law passed by voters last year that reclassified some crimes as
misdemeanors that had previously been felonies. The law has meant
reduced sentences for inmates serving time for those crimes. It also
means that fewer convicts are being sent to prison in the first
place.
But if the state does not make more reforms, he said, the number is
likely to creep up again. He also said that while the overall prison
population has dropped, there is still a shortage of psychiatric
beds for inmates with mental health problems and other housing for
inmates who need special accommodations.
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Another factor in the reduction was a policy by Brown of
transferring certain nonviolent offenders to the jurisdiction of
local counties.
Last February, California won two additional years to reduce
overcrowding in its prisons under an order issued by the panel of
federal judges.
The panel, which oversees prison crowding cases in California,
granted the extension to February 2016 because the state had
promised to develop comprehensive reforms to its prison system,
which at the time housed about 120,000 inmates in facilities
designed to hold about 80,000.
If the population remains at the level reported on Thursday, the
state will have met its goal a year ahead of the extension deadline.
(Editing by Eric Walsh)
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