The publication of "Cruel Justice" coincides with the
10-year anniversary of a major change in California penal law known
popularly as "three strikes and you're out." The value of this law is as
hotly debated today as it was a decade ago. Proponents of the
three-strikes law argue that it has been responsible for a major decline
in crime rates since the mid-1990s. Critics of the law find few statistics
to back this claim. Further, they argue that three strikes produces
manifest examples of injustice by forcing relatively minor offenders to
serve sentences of 25 years to life, adding substantial costs to the state
prison system.
Although the three-strikes law was not the only
contributor, the California correctional population has grown tremendously
since the law was enacted. In part to stem the seemingly uncontrollable
growth in fiscal outlays for prisons, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has just
appointed former Gov. George Deukmejian to head a special panel to review
the penal system. When Deukmejian presided over California state
government, there were about 30,000 inmates; today that number is closer
to 160,000.
Since the 1980s, the state has built 21 prisons but
not opened a single new University of California campus. State
expenditures for corrections exceed $5 billion, which is greater than
state spending for all public four-year colleges. Some would argue that we
built a first-class prison system at the cost of having a third-rate
educational system.
In "Cruel Justice," Joe Domanick recounts a
fascinating story about how Californians embraced the harshest criminal
sentencing system of any state and describes the personalities and groups
that contributed to this result. He has not tried to write an analytic
study — indeed, the book is somewhat thin on some crucial facts about
crime trends and sentencing patterns. The book focuses on the moral
crusade led by Mike Reynolds, a small businessman from Fresno, whose
daughter was killed during a street crime. We also learn of the family
tragedy experienced by Marc and Joe Klaas when Polly, their young daughter
and granddaughter, respectively, was brutally murdered. Though Reynolds
quickly led a campaign to enact three strikes, the Klaas family came to
question whether they were being exploited by more conservative political
groups to garner support for a law only marginally related to the killing
of their child.
Domanick does a good job detailing the roles of
special interest groups such as the National Rifle Assn., the California
Correctional Peace Officers Assn. and the Republican Party (especially the
unsuccessful Senate candidate, Michael Huffington) in pushing for the new
"get tough" law. He also provides an excellent profile of USC law
professor Erwin Chemerinsky, who argued against three-strikes sentencing
before the U.S. Supreme Court. However, Domanick does a less than
satisfactory job in talking about other key opponents of the law, whom he
summarily labels Bay Area liberals. Nor does he provide many details on
the motivations and decisions of leaders of the state Democratic Party to
ultimately embrace that law as if it were their own.
"Cruel
Justice" is most compelling when it tells the stories of the criminals who
are swept up in the law's overreach. Domanick helps us understand the
human toll on individuals (and their families) of long prison terms. He
selects two people whose lives have not been exemplary but who were drawn
to tragic situations by their addictions to drugs and alcohol. The
fair-minded reader should develop some compassion for the suffering of
these people, who will spend most of their lives in prison because of the
three-strikes law.
Domanick offers a general theory of the
motivations of the law's supporters, painting a portrait of rural and
small-town Californians enraged by a decline in civility supposedly
brought about by the migration of people of color to California. He avoids
an accusation of racism by pointing to their hostile attitudes toward poor
whites as well, cast as a modern-day version of the Okies. These angry
middle-class white men embrace a hard-edged approach to law enforcement
and punishment. Though this analysis might somewhat fit the attitudes of
some Californians, it fails to explain why three strikes and other
draconian sentencing bills are usually supported by the vast majority of
Californians. How can it be that the Golden State, one of the staunchest
supporters of the Democratic party, would cling to the right wing of
criminal justice philosophies?
"Cruel Justice" provides a snapshot
of the rise of "get tough" crime policies that started with the passage of
the determinate sentencing law during Gov. Jerry Brown's administration
and advanced through thousands of bills that enhance penalties. Only a few
years ago, with the overwhelming passage of Proposition 21 — the nation's
toughest sentencing bill for juvenile offenders — the electorate showed
that its appetite for harsh penalties was not sated. Besides harsher laws,
the state has enacted parole policies that have produced a high rate of
recidivism: The majority of prisoners are re-incarcerated within a few
months of their release, often for violations of the terms of their
parole, not for new crimes. Prison costs have skyrocketed, and the new
governor is seeking creative ways to reduce the inmate
population.
The changes in the law do not tell the entire story of
punishment in California. Recent revelations of horrid conditions for
young people housed in a Youth Authority facility and the ongoing scandals
of abusive practices in state prisons suggest that there are other
meanings for the term "cruel justice." The state spends a healthy share of
taxpayer funds defending itself against civil rights actions brought by
federal agencies or through the judiciary. Several legislative studies and
the work of the Little Hoover Commission have indicated how dysfunctional
the penal system has become. The new governor will need to be a real
superhero to tackle a corrections system that is so out of
balance.
Unfortunately, "Cruel Justice" offers few compelling
suggestions for reform. Domanick expresses some hope that new state drug
policies will go the way of local drug courts and the enactment of
Proposition 36 (which mandates treatment rather than prison for minor drug
offenders). But these measures by themselves will not have a major effect
on reducing the state prison population. Domanick correctly labels three
strikes as a ticking time bomb, in the sense that ever more offenders
become eligible for its lengthy sentences. Although we can find a little
solace in the fact that some district attorneys are using the law more
sparingly, this situation could change with each electoral cycle, or with
the next media-hyped crime. Ultimately, Californians must face up to the
harm done to all of us by three strikes and amend the law to focus
primarily on repeat violent offenders. "In our zeal to punish offenders,
we should be careful not to punish ourselves," my mentor Milton Rector,
former president of the National Council on Crime and Delinquency, used to
say. This sage advice should guide California penal policy and practice
today. •






