State of the US prison system: Violently overcrowded and mentally ill
Two NYT reports today bring further evidence to why the US prison system needs serious help. The first, “Mentally Ill Offenders Strain Juvenile System,” details issues most juvenile justice workers know all too well:
As cash-starved states slash mental health programs in communities and schools, they are increasingly relying on the juvenile corrections system to handle a generation of young offenders with psychiatric disorders. About two-thirds of the nation’s juvenile inmates — who numbered 92,854 in 2006, down from 107,000 in 1999 — have at least one mental illness, according to surveys of youth prisons, and are more in need of therapy than punishment.
The second story, “Hundreds Hurt in 11-Hour California Prison Riot,” is 1) almost cliche in its message about overcrowding:
With more than 150,000 inmates, the California prison system is one of the most crowded in the nation, with many of its facilities holding more than double the number of inmates they were designed for. A federal three-judge panel ruled last week that crowding and poor health care caused one avoidable inmate death each week and that the system was “impossible to manage.”
…and 2) fascinating in its sociological implications:
The Chino prison is trying to put into effect a 2005 Supreme Court decision that prohibits automatic and systematic racial segregation of prison inmates after more than three decades of racial separation in the corrections system.
Lieutenant Hargrove said that inmates could now opt out of segregation and that a growing number of black, Latino and white prisoners shared cells, increasing racial tensions in the prison.
“All races had injuries,” Lieutenant Hargrove said of the weekend riot. “But there are a greater number of injuries among Hispanic and black inmates. And we did have another incident that occurred in May, a riot between blacks and Hispanics, and this may be associated with that incident.”
So what’s the solution? How can California avoid prison riots like this one?
“There are proposals to eliminate all programs including reducing visiting days for inmates participating in programs,” Mr. Krisberg said. “But if you isolate these men from their families and cut down even the most basic educational and counseling programs, you’re going to create more idleness, and this is what happens.”
Which I guess means: “We have no solution.”
Kudos to Solomon Moore for these reports.

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Sounds like things are pretty much f’ed up. There was so many things that were wrong with these prisons, where to start? Is it all of these things together, or just one of them that makes such a volatile mix?
[...] prisons have a serious overcrowding problem. It’s gotten so bad in California that a judge ordered the state to set 40,000 inmates [...]