STUDY FINDS
NEED FOR THREE STRIKES REFORM
A study released today by the Justice Policy
Institute found California's
"three-strikes" sentencing law
extremely out of step with the rest of the
country, and concluded that the law needs to be
reformed.
"This clearly proves the folly of imposing
these unfair and extremely wasteful life
sentences on petty, non-violent offenders,"
said Yes on 66, "Fix Three Strikes"
campaign leader Joe Klaas. "It's time to
reform our law, to keep repeat violent criminals
in prison for a very long time, provide fairer
sentences for less serious offenses, and to quit
wasting hundreds of millions of dollars a
year."
The report found that California, the only state
in which a non-violent felony can trigger a
third-strike life sentence, imprisons four times
as many people under the law as all the other
states combined, despite having just a third of
the population of those states. However,
California didn't enjoy a greater drop in crime
than those other states.
Additionally, it compared California, a large
state with a draconian three-strikes law, and
New York, a large state without one. It found
California's incarceration skyrocketing in the
past decade and New York's declining. However,
New York's violent crime rate dropped
significantly greater rate than California's.
"This is proof positive: clearly, life
sentences for non-violent offenders don't reduce
violent crime," said Klaas. "Let's
change this unjust and wasteful policy and pass
Proposition 66 in November."
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