The Failure of
Government Justice
by T. Norman Van
Cott [Posted on Wednesday,
March 01, 2006] [Subscribe at email services and
tell others]
It's often a heartbreaking story. It's also a repeating
story. Details change, but the essentials remain the same. What is
it? It's people on parole and probation committing yet more crimes.
Thousands each year. Those foisting these parolees and probationers
on us pollute our social environment just as owners of
poison-spewing factories pollute our air and water. Criminal justice
system employees get a pass on their pollution. Not so with factory
owners. Curious.
My
community, Muncie, Indiana, recently experienced this social
pollution. According to newspaper reports, a Mr. Ronald Hatfield was
sentenced to 28 years in prison for armed robbery in 1987.
Notwithstanding 77 write-ups for conduct and disciplinary
infractions while in prison, Hatfield was released on August 2,
2004. That's 11 years short of 28. On December 16, 2004 — 136 days
after his release — Hatfield killed a convenience store clerk
during, that's right, an armed robbery. For this crime,
Hatfield received life in prison, without
parole.
Hatfield
is the tip of a criminal iceberg. US Department of Justice
statistics indicate that parolee and probationer populations are
"fluid." Of the approximately 750,000 parolees at the end of 2003,
for example, 492,000 entered parolee status that year, while 470,000
exited. Eleven percent of exits returned to incarceration because of
at least one new offense. Twenty-eight percent were reincarcerated
due to parole rules violations. (Nine percent absconded!) Therefore,
the rock-bottom, bare minimum estimate of parolee crimes in 2003 was
about 51,700 (11% of 470,000). The corresponding figure for
probationers was 109,000. Probationers' recidivism rate is lower,
but probationer exits in 2003 were 4.6 times parolee
exits.
Who is
responsible for Hatfield's unserved 11 years? What about the
unserved sentences that led to the 160,000 crimes in 2003? Parolees
and probationers don't magically appear. To say the "system"
controls early releases — that releases are mandated by rules, and
hence beyond human discretion — is silly. That's the first defense
of bureaucratic minions everywhere. Such rules are not unchangeable;
they, and whatever discretion is built into them, are crafted by
living and breathing people.
Who
bears the costs of these early release crimes? In Hatfield's case,
it's hard to see beyond the convenience store clerk and her family,
isn't it? That burden is large and intense, no doubt like that
experienced by thousands of other victims of parolee and probationer
crime. At the risk of trivializing these costs, however, we can
easily argue that all of us incur costs because pollutants like
Hatfield make our social environments less attractive.
What
about those living and breathing people who sign off on these early
releases? Do they bear any personal liability? No. That's the
problem. They are usually government employees. You know what that
means: de facto job tenure, longevity-based promotions, and
lock-step salary increases.
By way
of contrast, imagine what would happen to owners of a factory that
spewed pollution into a river. Indeed, suppose it's the White River
that flows through Muncie. They would be financially liable for dead
fish and other environmental damage. How do dead convenience store
clerks measure up against dead fish?
Governments maintain records for
parolees and probationers who return to prison, abscond, or
successfully complete their parole and probation. This means that
the ingredients already exist for incentivizing the production of
early releases. Tie compensation of criminal justice system
employees to successful early releases, while at the same time
exacting financial penalties on employees who produce failed early
releases. One could even introduce gradations into the penalties
based on the reason for failure — new crimes, breaking rules of
parole/probation, or absconding.
Better
yet, why not privatize the parole and probation industry? You can
bet a privatized process would have incentives akin to
this.
Centuries of experience teach us that personal liability
makes people more attentive to the consequences of their actions.
Application of this principle to the parole and probation process
doesn't guarantee that Mr. Hatfield's victim or others like
her would still be alive. But it does mean that heartbreaking events
like it would be less likely to occur.
---------
T.
Norman Van Cott is a professor of economics at Ball State University
in Muncie, Indiana. Send him MAIL. See
his Mises.org Articles
Archive. Post
comments on the blog. You can receive the Mises Daily Article in your
inbox. Go here to
subscribe or unsubscribe.
|