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<text id=94TT0301>
<title>
Mar. 14, 1994: The Political Interest
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Mar. 14, 1994 How Man Began
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 32
Frying Them Isn't The Answer
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Michael Kramer
</p>
<p> Never get tarred as soft on crime. Bill Clinton learned that
lesson late, but he learned it well. After regaining Arkansas'
governorship in 1982, which he had lost in 1980 to a law-and-order
rival, Clinton set 70 execution dates for 26 prisoners over
10 years; three were actually put to death. To reaffirm his
mettle as he ran for the White House, Clinton rushed home from
New Hampshire to deny a condemned murderer's clemency plea.
The brain-damaged killer barely knew his own identity, let alone
the fate that awaited him (at his last meal, he saved the pecan
pie to eat later), but Clinton proceeded without apparent qualms.
"I can be nicked on a lot," he said afterward, "but no one can
say I'm soft on crime."
</p>
<p> What worked for the candidate is doing even better for the President.
The muscular, get-tough themes that have become a staple of
Clinton's rhetoric have won the public's blessing. Last week,
for the first time, the majority of people surveyed in two national
polls said Democrats are better able than Republicans to "handle
crime problems."
</p>
<p> Time, then, to deliver. A crime bill is struggling through Congress.
While Clinton avoided involvement during its drafting, he is
now complaining about the delay in its passage. Far worse, he
is supporting its most emotionally appealing proposals instead
of seeking to shore up the single measure that has been proved
to work: more cops on the beat. Last week, for example, Vice
President Al Gore offered the Administration's version of a
"three strikes and you're out" scheme that modifies the crime
bill's harsh life-imprisonment language only slightly by narrowing
the list of applicable felonies. Any three-strikes proposal,
however, will affect only several hundred federal inmates each
year. "We hope the states follow suit," says a Clinton aide,
an inefficient course that could bankrupt those that do. In
California, a three-strikes provision would double the incarcerated
population, require 20 new prisons and swell the current $2.8
billion corrections-department budget by about $2 billion. "We
can't afford it," says John Vasconcellos, chairman of the state
assembly's Ways and Means committee. "There would be no California
left, except for the police and prison state."
</p>
<p> As Gore claimed dubiously that a three-strikes law would make
a "huge dent in violent crime," Clinton endorsed expanding the
death penalty to 52 federal offenses, including the attempted
assassination of the President; today, only a drug-related killing
is a capital crime. Those on the front lines are appalled. "I
know of no law-enforcement professional who believes the ((new))
death-penalty provisions would affect public safety in the slightest,"
says Robert Morgenthau, Manhattan's respected district attorney.
Equally troublesome, declared Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun,
the death penalty "remains fraught with arbitrariness, discrimination,
caprice and mistake." According to a 1987 Stanford University
survey, at least 23 Americans have been wrongly executed in
the 20th century. Just since 1973 an additional 48 have been
freed from death row when evidence of their innocence surfaced
before their sentences were carried out. Too, says Blackmun,
the "virus of racism" pervades the penalty's application. Studies
confirmed by the General Accounting Office in 1990 report that
blacks who kill whites are sentenced to death at "nearly 22
times the rate of blacks who kill blacks and more than seven
times the rate of whites who kill blacks." Thus, despite the
many supposed safeguards, what matters most is still who you
are, who you kill and who your lawyer is--a reality made worse
as the Supreme Court repeatedly restricts the convicted killers'
rights of appeal.
</p>
<p> Serious crime fighting would, above all, emphasize the certainty
of capture. "Criminals calculate the odds of apprehension and
rightly conclude that crime pays," says Adam Walinsky, the New
York lawyer responsible for the crime bill's commendable police-corps
proposal, which would award college scholarships in exchange
for four years of law-enforcement work. "As recently as a decade
ago, arrest rates for homicide exceeded 95%, even in the big
cities. It's now down to 50%. The robbery arrest rate is down
to 24%; it's 13% for burglaries." Why? Well, for one thing,
there are currently 3.3 violent crimes committed for every police
officer, exactly opposite the ratio of 25 years ago. "Until
you invert that balance," says Walinsky, "you can forget about
it. Until you catch 'em, you can't even think about what to
do with 'em."
</p>
<p> The solution? Get more cops, which is exactly what the crime
bill proposes: almost $9 billion would be allocated to help
localities hire an additional 100,000 officers over five years.
But after that money runs out, financially strapped communities
may be forced to fire their new cops. What's needed, then, is
a rejiggering. The crime bill's many pork-barrel provisions,
like the one that would combat the introduction of "nonindigenous
plant and animal species" into Hawaii, should be junked. Every
available dollar should go for more cops--forever.
</p>
<p> Those like Al Gore, who says "we're searching for what works,"
should stop searching and work to beef up the one remedy proved
to make a difference. If, on the other hand, toughness is defined
by proliferating three-strikes laws, or by executing a few more
of the worst among us, then, as the recently resigned Deputy
Attorney General Philip Heymann says, politics will continue
to "overwhelm reason," and we'll be back "searching for what
works" after the next election.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>