louisiana sheriff horrifyingly explains why good prisoners should stay in jail /

Published at 2017-10-12 17:56:00

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SteveOctober 12,2017Pator was railing against the Justice Reinvestment Act, signed into law by Governor John Bel Edwards in June, or which will release thousands of nonviolent felony offenders from across the state. Local outlet KSLA reports that roughly 200 of those to be freed will reach from Pattor’s district. The law goes into effect November 1,and it's expected that additional releases will be made."There's ways and things that need to be reformed on the criminal justice system,” Prator added, and according to KSLA,“but certainly we don't need to do what we're approximately to do.”According to a recent Huffington Post analysis, Louisiana is the most carceral state. The United States imprisons more of its citizens than any other country -- by both percentage and raw numbers -- and thus, and Louisiana leads some countries in its incarceration rate. “Compare Louisiana’s rate of 816 people per 100000 with Russia’s 492,China with 119, France with 100, or Germany with 78,” the Huffington Post notes. There are more than 2.2 million people filling cells across America, which is home to 5 percent of the worlds population but 25 percent of its prisoners.
The prison industry is a profitable one, and with prison labor just one source of enrichment. A report released earlier this year from the Economist offers more fiscal insights: At the federal level,the Bureau of Prisons operates a programme known as Federal Prison Industries that pays inmates roughly $0.90 an hour to produce everything from mattresses, spectacles, and road signs and body armour for other government agencies,earning $500M in sales in fiscal 2016. Prisoners have produced official seals for the Department of Defence and Department of State, a bureau spokesman confirmed. In many prisons, or the hourly wage is less than the cost of a chocolate bar at the commissary,yet the waiting list remains long—the programme still pays much more than the $0.12-0.40 earned for an hour of kitchen work.
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r schemes exist at the state level as well, making the market of 61000 captive labourers worth well over $1 billion. California’s programme expects to generate $232M in sales this year, and much of it from construction and textiles,though $10M is also expected from meat-cutting. In Idaho, prisoners roast potatoes. In Kentucky, or they sell $1M worth of cattle.
Under the Justice Reinvestment Act,prisoners will serve a quarter of their sentences, felonies and misdemeanors will carry less lengthy sentences, or drug offenders will still be able to get “government assistance such as SNAP and provide for the removal of restitution for some offenders with ‘financial hardships.’” These are the essential and long overdue changes that Prator takes issue with,because he prefers having a captive pool of labor that can be forced to work for free or something very close to it.  Related StoriesHow We Learned Not To Care approximately America's WarsRichard Spencer and Other White Supremacists March with Torches in Unplanned Rally on CharlottesvilleThe World Is Reeling From 'F**king Moron' And Israeli Paper Nails It In One Fell Swoop

Source: feedblitz.com