View Full Version : Parole board's work slows


DeniseJ
08-19-2004, 08:39 AM
Parole board's work slows


Thursday, August 19, 2004 CARLA CROWDER
News staff writer
The work of a special parole board appointed to relieve crowding in Alabama prisons has slowed to a trickle, but the inmate population hasn't been reduced by much.

Overall, the prison population has dropped by 848 inmates since the second parole board got to work in December, according to the Department of Corrections.

Although several thousand nonviolent prisoners have been freed through parole over the past year, more drug and property offenders continue to flow into the prisons, many of them serving long sentences under the state's sentencing laws for drug offenders and habitual nonviolent offenders.

Now paroles of people convicted of nonviolent drug and property crimes have dropped off to about 35 a week, down from a weekly average of about 150 when the special hearings began.

"It means we've gone though all the nonviolent cases, and the ones they're looking at are ones that have already been turned down or haven't served much time," said Cynthia Dillard, assistant executive director of the board.

Last week, the board held 158 hearings and granted parole to 20 prisoners, Dillard said. The board has reduced the days it holds hearings from four to three.



Double capacity:

Alabama's prisons still are crowded, though. The prison population in July stood at 26,496, down by 1,640 since July a year ago but higher than it was a few months ago, according to Department of Corrections records.

"We still have pretty much double the design capacity," said Department of Corrections spokesman Brian Corbett.

"At this point, there is no easy solution. We are working on some alternative plans, but we also have to see where the population goes. It's still a wait-and-see thing," he said.

Gov. Bob Riley proposed the second board to head off a federal takeover of state prisons after voters rejected his $1.2 billion tax plan in September.

The Legislature appropriated $7.38 million extra for the parole board's budget, and additional officers were hired to oversee the new releases.

Various state officials estimated that 5,000 to 7,000 prisoners would be released through "special dockets" for nonviolent offenders.

The special dockets began in April 2003, and the second board was appointed in December. About 4,000 inmates have been paroled through that effort in the past 16 months.

"The special docket was never thought to be the solution, the silver bullet," said Riley spokesman Jeff Emerson. "The problems are still there, but we have made some progress. If this had not happened, the population would be more than it is today."

Attorney General Troy King this month began reviewing parole statistics in an effort to determine what types of convicts are getting out of prison.

King said he wants to know the numbers of violent versus nonviolent offenders who have gotten out in recent months and whether the parole board's backlog on hearings for violent offenders has been reduced.

For years, prisoners convicted of violent crimes have had to wait more than a year for a parole hearing because of delays in the process and difficulty finding victims of old crimes, who must be notified under state law.

"There are a lot of things I've called on the board publicly to act more carefully on," King said.

He's especially interested in a report detailing the backgrounds of violent offenders who've been paroled.



Shower discipline:

Hardest hit by the packed prisons are the prisoners themselves.

This summer at Donaldson Correctional Facility in western Jefferson County, inmates were given a strict shower schedule and warned that if they violated it, they would face unspecified disciplinary action. The schedule was developed to avoid overloading the prison's sewer system, according to a memo issued June 28 to inmates.

Donaldson and St. Clair Correctional Facility have been breaking federal clean water laws for several months because their sewer systems are overloaded and periodically dump raw sewage into neighboring creeks.

The prisons house about twice the number of inmates as they were designed for, and the wastewater treatment facilities cannot handle the amount of waste generated by so many extra bodies, prison officials have said.

Donaldson has 1,586 prisoners in space designed for 992.

small town usa
08-20-2004, 08:20 PM
Why is it so hard for the boards to see that over half of the 'old-timers' need to come home! If there is an inmate that has did 15-20 years in prison, they have did enough time to know that they do not want to die there and would be most likely to do all and anything to keep from going back, just by followering the law. The ones that they are letting out has not did enough time to come to the realization that they do not want to spend the rest of their lives there. Beside if you have an inmate that after 20-25 years behind bars that still have the desire to even come home should be given a chance. Or thats how I see it and can't understand why they can't either. Out of the high number of inmates that the state of Alabama have, I'am sure there are thousands that just want to come home and live peacefully the rest of their lives with family and friends. I know my husband does. They have tried letting some out, and they returned, why not give the ones that have did long terms out.

LeesLady
08-20-2004, 09:07 PM
That's exactly what I've been saying for a looooong time small town.There are alot of people in there that would love to just have the chance to prove themselves,but they would rather let some go that haven't served enough time to know they don't want to go back.My sister was in prison in Texas,she done like 18 months for the second time(I think,could be more)well anyway she got out and from what I hear she's right back doing the same ole same.She is like 45 yrs.old and still acting like she's 16,some people just never learn.

PJ1965
08-20-2004, 09:38 PM
I agree with you small town, I'm in the same situation as you from the way it sounds. My husband has been in for 16 years now and that's all he talks about...getting home and spending the rest of his life at home with his family.

rjgulled
08-21-2004, 12:03 AM
My husband has only been in since March,but they threw the book at him for his first offense.They gave him 15 years and never filed for probation.The case was almost three years old before they indicted him.he had already changed his life.The arresting officer asked the DA why he wanted to put someone who was already rehabilitated in prison,and he said he didn't care how he had changed his life he was going to have a conviction.If we didn't have so many DA's out there tring to make names for themselves more loved ones would be coming home.A lot of times the DA and the judge can change sentencing.We are praying that God changes his heart and mind and we will get my husband home soon!! With God all things are possible!!!

Care9
08-21-2004, 07:10 PM
My husband has done almost 27 years on a life with possibility of parole. WTF? What are they waiting for? I try not to be bitter and how he remains as kind as he is, is a mystery to me. But come on, 27 years of GOOD TIME !!?!?!? He just wrote to me this week and told me that a guy across from him (nonviolent case) is schedule for his THIRD hearing in 9 months. Duh, wonder why the parole board is so backed up????? I am baffled; I simply cannot understand why it is so hard to figure out. I agree; they need to take a look at the long-timers and give these people a chance to have a life outside of those bars while they still have the desire to do so.....and while they still have a family and support system out here to help them be a success.

Or maybe they don't really WANT prisoners who are paroled to be a success. That is my take on it anyhow. Good grief, it doesn't take too much to figure it out that the long timers who have a reason to stay clean out here are much more apt to never return. And in our case, Alabama won't even have to supervise my husband since I live out of state. They can't really be this dense not to figure out part of the solution to uncrowding the prisons, can they??????