Calif. Voters May Get a Chance to Fix Three-Strikes Law
Courts have repeatedly rejected attempts to overturn California's harsh three-strikes law that mandates a life sentence for third time offenders, including those whose third strike was a minor, non-violent offense. According to LA Weekly, a recent study by the Justice Policy Institute (JPI) revealed these numbers:
...more than 42,000 prisoners — more than one-fourth of the state’s total — are serving doubled or 25-to-life sentences under Three Strikes. Nearly two-thirds of them are doing time for a nonviolent offense. That number includes more than 1,000 inmates serving 25-to-life for theft under $400 or drug possession. Some of their crimes practically define the word petty: One man is doing 31 years for stealing a pair of AA batteries; another got 25 years for shoplifting three packs of J.C. Penney T-shirts.
California's three-strikes law was enacted at a time when fear of crime was rampant. Like the unborn fetus protection bill that Congress passed yesterday, it was in large part a reaction to the death of one child who became a household name: Polly Klass.
The most organized, vocal group opposing three-strike laws is FACT--we have written about them a few times, including here. According to LA Weekly, the group just might get the issue on the ballot so voters can rethink the unjust law. They are seeking signatures for an initiative that:
... would make only violent and specific serious crimes count as strikes. It would also allow inmates convicted of minor offenses to appeal their second- or third-strike sentences, and would boost penalties for adults who molest children.
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