I am not arguing against that. I do believe that prisons have done a reasonably effective job of isolating prisoners from the general population. The effects that those prisoners have on the outside are true influence, and frankly those who would kill or commit other crimes based on what someone on the inside tells them would likely commit crimes and kill anyway.
With no intention to offend, I think you miss the point.
While there are criminals who rape, mutilate, torture and kill merely for the sake of doing it, there are also those who commit equally heinous crimes for a reason. And the reason in this case is to control the prison.
Once they have gained control of the prison, the criminal justice system is no longer protecting us. And
that is the point.
Two points here.
- If prisons are run by the inmates, then we need to take control of the prisons back.
How do you propose to do that? What means will you use to keep a Corrections Officer from working for the man who has the power to kidnap, torture and murder his six-year old daughter?
I doubt there are few prison officials who would claim that their prison couldn’t use better facilities and more guards. We can’t really argue that we can’t control the prisons if we are not willing to at least try.
The incident I described happened inside one of the most secure prisons in the country. And it was by no means an isolated incident.
When prisoners can reach out and touch Corrections Officers’ families, it doesn’t matter how many Corrections Officers you have, or how good the facilities are – the prisoners will run the prison.
- There is another level, its called essentially a life in solitary confinement. When the criminal has virtually no contact with other prisoners or guards, there is little chance that they are able to have any impact on other prisoners or the outside world.
Tommy Silverstein was in exactly such a facility – Marion, Illinois – when he put together a plot to murder Corrections Officers. Two Corrections Officers were killed on the same day.
To say that life in solitary confinement, with no contact with other prisoners is effective or even possible defies the facts.
With respect, I think the very nature of the fact that these people are in prisons indicate that they are incapable of believing that they will be held accountable for their actions (or don’t care). Such men I suspect would not find the prospect of a potential death penalty to be much of a deterence.
I know a lot of Corrections Officers – men who deal with criminals like this on a day-to-day basis who will hotly deny what you say.
I never said I was willing to bet lives. I used the term in reference to the fact that the sorts of criminals who end up on death row are more likely to be those who are not part of orginizations that would give them the power to impact those on the outside.
You assume that only criminals on death row are killers. In fact, some of the most brutal murderers are serving lesser sentences.
Personally, I would have no problem with sentencing murders to solitary confinement and deny them the right to contact with the outside world other than very limited monitored visits and access to priests and other religious ministers. Such means would probably make them less potentially harmless than current prisoners on death row.
So explain how the Tommy Silversteins and other murderers manage to kill Corrections Officers while in solitary confinement?
Reality in prison is not what you think it is, and not what many bishops imagine it is.
See above. In any case, the number of Corrections officers killed every year averages a little over 7 a year (for the period 1995-2005).
So you are willing to sacrifice that number of lives?
Remember, there are two issues here. The actuall killing of Corrections Officers is only one. The second issue is the intimidation and control of Corrections Officers by inmates. The killing of seven Corrections Officers a year has a horrible impact on the ability of the prisons to do what you say they are supposed to do – keep dangerous prisoners from doing more harm.
(Continued in next post)