Category Archives: Truth in Sentencing

Same Faces, Same Problems

Gov. John Kitzhaber could have created a more credible Commission on Public Safety had he and legislative leaders randomly picked names off the state’s voter rolls. Instead, they ended up with Chief Justice Paul J. De Muniz, who most recently distinguished himself by vacating a Death Row inmate’s execution date – even though the inmate […]

Where the Dancing Never Stops

Susan Smith must be sitting in her South Carolina prison cell thinking, “Chloroform and duct tape – damn! Why didn’t I think of that?” The young mother killed her two sons in 1994, then blamed a man who carjacked her and made off with her vehicle and children. Her case is more often recalled because […]

Gary Haugen’s Con Job

The only people guaranteed a humane death in the U.S. are the men and women on Death Row. The rest of us are at the mercy of disease, old age, drunken drivers, war, natural disasters, the list goes on. Some of us will be at the mercy of guys like Gary Haugen. Anyone can suffer […]

The Japanese Way to Prison Reform

The U.S. Supreme Court has given California two years to release or relocate 33,000 prison inmates. This is good news to those who think criminal justice reform is overdue. But how can we have criminal justice reform without reforming American culture? And how can we change American culture without offending someone’s civil rights? Mention prison […]

Erasing the Past

After Winona Ryder was convicted of shoplifting, her career suffered a setback and Cher noted, “It’s such a drag that some crimes are cool and some crimes are uncool.” Ben Price’s crime – distributing cocaine – could be cool or uncool depending on who’s judging him. Among some people a felony conviction calls for sympathy. […]