Solution to packed jails a taro patch away
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ROBERT GARDNER
Every so often a local sheriff gets called on the carpet for
operating an over-crowded jail. For the sheriff, it’s a tough
situation. After all, it’s not simply a matter of finding some rooms,
or he could reserve a couple of suites at the nearest Hilton.
While the prisoners might enjoy a stay at the Hilton, it doesn’t
exactly meet security needs. The sheriff needs new jail cells, and
for that he needs a new jail, but it takes a certain amount of time
to build a jail, and that’s only if you can find a community that
will let you build one in the first place. In the interim, his only
alternative to relieve the overcrowding is to release some of those
doing time. Of course, then he’s called on the carpet for not having
people serve their proper sentences. Talk about being caught between
a rock and a hard place.
In that situation, some historical perspective might help. The old
Newport Beach jail was located near the Newport pier. It had one cell
that measured about 20 by 30 feet. On a busy Saturday night during
Prohibition, the police jammed up to 75 men into that cell. It bore a
startling resemblance to the Black Hole of Calcutta. No one died in
that cell, but it did get a bit messy. With that many drunks crowded
into one small place, someone was sure to get sick and throw up.
That seemed to have a domino effect. The sight, smell and sound of
75 men all barfing at the same time was quite a spectacle. As a side
note, after Prohibition, the average number of prisoners on a busy
Saturday night dropped to about 50, which proves that one could get
drunk quicker on the straight alcohol of Prohibition than the legal
whiskey after the repeal.
Up in Santa Ana, Deputy Sheriff Theo “Budge” Lacey ran the old
Orange County jail. No matter who was sheriff, Budge stayed on as
jailer. His father before him had been a jailer -- I guess it ran in
the family.
That jail had been built in the early ‘20s to hold 250 prisoners.
By the time the new jail was built, that old jail held up to 750
prisoners regularly. Budge just jammed them in every which way. They
slept on the floors and probably hung from the rafters. Nobody
thought to complain about it. I guess they figured if you’d done
something that put you in jail, you had to put up with the
consequences, including crowding.
That won’t do today, so what’s a sheriff to do while he waits
years to get the money and votes to build a new jail? The sheriff
could take a lesson from American Samoa.
When I went to Samoa, I inherited a sentencing practice that was
startling, to say the least. I hadn’t been there long when I
sentenced a man to 45 years in prison for murder. Imagine my
surprise, not to say horror, several days later when I met him
strolling down the sidewalk in Pago Pago. I was all set to call the
police and announce a jailbreak when my friend Olo explained the
Samoan system to me. I pass it on now as a primer in relieving the
overcrowding of our jails.
In Samoa, prisoners serve their full terms. However, during his
term, a prisoner gets weekend release to be with his family. This
relieves any crowding of the jails on Saturday and Sunday. Then,
during the week, he gets work release to work on the family taro
patch, which takes care of Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and
Friday. As a result, there is little problem with over-crowding at
the Tafuna Correctional Institution.
There is a side benefit to this practice as well. Samoan prisoners
don’t try to escape. Escape from what? Even if they don’t like their
families, it’s better than jail, and besides, where would they escape
to? The closest island is 70 miles away.
So I submit this as a way to relieve overcrowding. The only
drawback I see to implementing the plan here is the lack of taro
patches, but surely some bright mind can come up with a solution to
that.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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