Why Long Prison Sentences Don’t Help

Angel

Written by Rick Fisk

Father, Son, Brother, Musician, Software Developer, Founder, Executive Director, Wrongly Imprisoned, Paroled, Seeker of Redemption, Finder of Forgiveness. I found my faith in prison and my purpose. I want to help set the captives free, those on the inside and the outside.

June 11, 2019

Mary Ann MgGivern writes in the National Catholic Reporter:

[…]I was on the elevator with one of the governor’s aides, who said, “Oh, yes, the governor is committed to addressing mandatory minimums.”

I said, “For violent crimes?”

He said, “Oh, not violent crimes, that’s another matter. That’s different. I don’t know that there’s any appetite for reducing sentencing for violent crimes.”

Let me tell you, dear reader, that Missouri sentences are longer than most and that reports like those detailed in the America article find long sentences make things worse, not better. They don’t rehabilitate or prepare the person for work and family reunification. They just punish and punish and punish. They cost the family and the local community and they are expensive for the state, too.

But what the young aide, new to the job as our governor is new to his job (our elected governor was forced to resign), doesn’t realize is that the mandatory minimums he wants to reduce or even eliminate are generally tied to violent crimes. That’s what triggers them. So, say some years ago you hijacked a car, got caught, went to prison for five years, and years later you were arrested on two counts of drug possession. That triggers the mandatory minimums. Even if the third crime is 15 years later, like one client of mine who had been off parole for years but stole a lawn mower to support his drug habit. He was sentenced to 17 years in prison for that theft.

Besides writing on prison issues Mary also writes to several prisoners. She’s an angel. We keep discovering them in our real and virtual travels.

You May Also Like…

Trailer: Letters From Prison

Trailer: Letters From Prison

Some of you may have already seen this in our Spring 2017 Quarterly E-Newsletter - but it deserves it's own post, and...

2 Comments

  1. Artie Cabrera

    How can enroll an inmate so he can get letters.

    Reply

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Share This