Articles
& News
July 7, 2008
Miles to go for
L.A. justice
Policing is improved; now let's focus on the
root causes of crime.
By Joe Domanick, LA Times
Over
the last few decades, it's been easy to blame the leadership of
the Los Angeles Police Department, the L.A. County Sheriff's
Department and the district attorney's office for the catastrophic
failures of L.A.'s criminal justice system. These failures, as
most Angelenos know, have led to a dangerously overcrowded,
racially explosive county jail system; a violent gang problem that
continues unabated after 10,000 deaths over 25 years, and
generation after generation of young black and brown men
ceaselessly shuttled off to state prisons at a rate of more than
22,000 a year -- as many as 70% of whom, once released, will
recycle back within three years.
During the 1980s and 1990s, the LAPD and the Sheriff's Department
epitomized the problems with the criminal justice system:
Leadership was calcified and visionless, disdainful of social
science and innovative policing reforms, tolerant of brutal and
abusive officers, unaccountable to civilian control and
perennially at war with the African American community. Under LAPD
chiefs Ed Davis and Daryl F. Gates and Sheriff Sherman Block,
these departments generated scandal after scandal, culminating in
1992 in one of the worst riots in U.S. history.
For their part, Ira Reiner (1984-1992) and Gil Garcetti
(1992-2000), as district attorneys, spent their time sniffing the
political winds and playing to the worst instincts of voters.
Reiner reacted to gang violence by calling for the "writing off"
and imprisoning of the 70,000 young residents who had, often
inaccurately, been identified as gang members. And Garcetti
opportunistically prosecuted the pettiest of offenses as
third-strike, 25-years-to-life crimes (even after having lobbied
against the politically popular law in Sacramento).
Today, despite some notorious incidents, such as the 2007 May Day
MacArthur Park police riot, and some ongoing disgraces such as the
dangerous and inhuman conditions in our county jails, we're better
served by our law enforcement leaders. They've lowered the crime
rate while largely making peace with the leaders of L.A.'s African
American and Latino communities.
Chief William J. Bratton has accelerated the transformation of the
LAPD into a much more accountable organization. Sheriff Lee Baca
has worked to transform the paramilitary culture of his
department, and he has sought a comprehensive approach to public
safety that includes better schools, healthcare and social
services. For his part, Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley has eschewed
headline-grabbing, get-tough answers to complex questions.
Unfortunately, they've been busy retooling the engine to run more
efficiently instead of giving it the drastic overhaul it
desperately needs. Even though this new generation of leaders has
supported long-term crime prevention strategies, they have been
unwilling to commit significant money or political capital to the
process, focusing, for example, on immediate reductions in gang
crime while remaining unwilling to fight for the money and make
the psychological shift necessary to end the gang culture at the
heart of the problem. Their primary focus has remained on crime
suppression (or crisis management in the jails). Consequently,
L.A.'s criminal justice system still operates as a zero-sum
exercise in locking up the same people from the same neighborhoods
generation after generation, without an end game in sight.
Why, if they recognize the need for the shift, have they failed to
accomplish it? One reason why is that it's extremely difficult.
Baca and Cooley's surrogates have been meeting for almost two
years with the L.A. Public Defender's Office, the Probation
Department, the California Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation and with L.A. Superior Court Judge Michael Tynan to
develop rehabilitative prisoner reentry strategies. Yet only a few
small, experimental pilot programs have been established.
Law enforcement agencies are not used to working together for the
common goal of long-term crime prevention. Common goals, a common
vision and even a common language have to be developed, and
everybody needs to sign off before there's any movement. Community
service organizations, drug treatment facilities and other such
groups all have to be brought into the fold. A jurisdictional
tangle of state, county and city laws must also be dealt with
before much progress can be made.
Much of the problem lies with L.A.'s politicians. With a few
exceptions (such as state Sen. Gloria Romero, City Comptroller
Laura Chick and Councilwoman Janice Hahn), city leaders as well as
our representatives in Sacramento have been unwilling to lead on
these issues. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa has coordinated all the
city's gang programs under one entity in the Office of Gang
Reduction and Youth Development for the first time -- in effect
laying down the path and officially recognizing for the first time
that the city has to have a holistic approach to eradicating gang
crime and youth violence. He should be commended. But the money
he's allocated to the agency is a relative pittance. He's putting
his real political muscle behind a sales tax for mass transit, not
public safety.
Organizations like the notoriously anti-reform California
Correctional Peace Officers Assn. -- the prison guards union --
and the California District Attorneys Assn. are also a big part of
the problem. The latter has successfully fought attempts to reform
mandatory minimum-sentencing laws such as three strikes, nearly
drumming Cooley out of the organization a year or so ago when he
sought to soften some of the most unjust provisions of the law.
And Mike Jimenez, president of the guards union, has declared that
he has "never met an inmate that could be rehabilitated." By
bullying or buying off governors and legislators with big campaign
dollars, and fear-mongering with the help of victims rights
groups, the union (which has donated $12 million to state
campaigns over five years) has been astoundingly successful in
thwarting change. They, along with the conservative legislators
who demand near Old Testament punishment for drug offenses and
other nonviolent crimes, have stuffed our prisons to almost 200%
capacity and left us no money for alternatives to incarceration.
Meanwhile, the public remains profoundly ignorant or deeply
misinformed about how the system really works. Some of the fault
for this lies with the broadcast media. Talk radio drove the
hysteria that led to California's three-strikes law in 1994. Now,
cable television has become part of the lynch-mob media. Led by
CNN's Nancy Grace, cable shows make it appear that criminals are
constantly getting off scot-free. In fact, America's (and L.A.'s)
crime rates are at record lows -- yet the U.S. prison population
has risen every year for 30 years.
Networks such as MSNBC, meanwhile, feature endless prison
documentaries that give the impression that every one of the
millions of Americans in prison -- half of whom are incarcerated
for nonviolent crimes -- is a psychotic ax-murderer. Local TV
news, with its love of violence, cheap melodrama and good
guys-versus-bad guys simplicity, also promotes a ceaseless
message: Be afraid, be very afraid.
Then there are the cop melodramas that -- with the astounding
exception of HBO's "The Wire" -- almost never look at criminal
justice as a system that is dramatically failing large segments of
black, Latino and poor white Americans. Nor do these shows make
the connections between crime and bad schools, shoddy healthcare,
bad jobs and a history of racial disenfranchisement. They don't
discuss the connection between the historic racial, class and
economic disenfranchisement of black Americans and the entrenched
criminal culture that has emerged in many of our worst urban
ghettos and barrios. Instead, they present shows like "CSI" and
"Law and Order" as dramas where good police in a just system
triumph over bad criminals. Everything is clear-cut good guys vs.
bad guys, just like in real life -- right?
Last among the culprits are those white liberals and black leaders
barring the door to open, honest public discourse about black
crime in America because, as the Rev. Al Sharpton recently pointed
out, they don't want to "air their dirty laundry in public." But
everybody knows that crime and violence in our nation's poor,
black ghettos has been pandemic for decades. This must be talked
about and examined.
Young black men in ghettos across America are trapped in a
hedonistic, values-warped subculture of narcissistic flash,
violence, gangs, immediate self-gratification and self-destruction
-- unable to pass through a revolving door of gangs, drop-out
education, unemployment, incarceration, release and
re-imprisonment. Nor is the problem limited to black communities.
Latinos now make up the largest group of inmates in state prisons.
Law-and-order conservatives, meanwhile, have offered nothing but
more of the same -- more prisons and bigger platitudes.
We can't deal with the root causes, and begin the long task of
fashioning a solution, until we acknowledge the dreadful
dysfunction of this criminal-prone subculture.
And we will never have a criminal justice system that works for
all Americans until we start to hold accountable those who are
responsible.
Joe Domanick is a senior fellow at USC Annenberg's Institute for
Justice and Journalism and at the Center on Media Crime and
Justice at John Jay College of Criminal Justice.
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