Being Poor is A Crime

by sammielee24 24 Replies latest jw friends

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    Guilty of Being Poor

    by Eric Ruder / April 23rd, 2009

    The jailers of the 19th century — even in the pre-Civil War South — largely abandoned the practice of imprisoning people for falling into debt as counterproductive and ultimately barbaric. In the 1970s and ’80s, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed that incarcerating people who can’t pay fines because of poverty violates the U.S. Constitution.

    Apparently, though, some states and county jails never got the memo. Welcome to the debtors’ prisons of the 21st century.

    “Edwina Nowlin, a poor Michigan resident, was ordered to reimburse a juvenile detention center $104 a month for holding her 16-year-old son,” the New York Times wrote in an editorial.

    “When she explained to the court that she could not afford to pay, Ms. Nowlin was sent to prison. The American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan, which helped get her out last week after she spent 28 days behind bars, says it is seeing more people being sent to jail because they cannot make various court-ordered payments. That is both barbaric and unconstitutional.”

    The details of Nowlin’s case are even more alarming than the Times editorial suggests. Not only was Nowlin under orders to pay a fine stemming from someone else’s actions, but she had been laid off from work and lost her home at the time she was ordered to “reimburse” the county for her son’s detention.

    Despite her inability to pay, she was held in contempt of court and ordered to serve a 30-day sentence. On March 6, three days after she was incarcerated, she was released for one day to work. She also picked up her paycheck, in the amount of $178.53. This, she thought, could be used to pay the $104, and she would be released from jail.

    But when she got back to the jail, the sheriff told her to sign her check over to the county — to pay $120 for her own room and board, and $22 for a drug test and booking fee.

    Even more absurd, Nowlin requested but was denied a court-appointed lawyer. So because she was too poor to afford a lawyer and denied her constitutional right to have the court provide one for her, she couldn’t fight the contempt charge that stemmed from her poverty. And her contempt conviction only added to her poverty, as the fines and fees she was obligated to pay now multiplied.

    “Like many people in these desperate economic times, Ms. Nowlin was laid off from work, lost her home and is destitute,” said Michael Steinberg, legal director of the Michigan ACLU. “Jailing her because of her poverty is not only unconstitutional, it’s unconscionable and a shameful waste of resources. It is not a crime to be poor in this country, and the government must stop resurrecting debtor’s prisons from the dustbin of history.”

    Michigan isn’t the only place where you can be imprisoned for the crime of involuntary poverty. The same Catch-22 ensnares poor defendants daily in courtrooms across the country.

    In 2006, the Southern Center for Human Rights (SCHR) filed a suit on behalf of Ora Lee Hurley, who couldn’t get out of prison until she had enough money to pay a $705 fine. But she couldn’t pay the fine because she had to pay the Georgia Department of Corrections $600 a month for room and board, and spend $76 a month on public transportation, laundry and food.

    She was released five days a week to work at the K&K Soul Food restaurant, where she earned $6.50 an hour, which netted her about $700 a month after taxes. Hurley was trapped in prison for eight months beyond her initial 120-day sentence until the Southern Center intervened. Over the course of her incarceration, she earned about $7,000, but she never had enough at one time to pay off her $705 fine.

    “This is a situation where if this woman was able to write a check for the amount of the fine, she would be out of there,” Sarah Geraghty, a SCHR lawyer, told the Atlanta Journal Constitution while Hurley was still imprisoned. “And because she can’t, she’s still in custody. It’s as simple as that.”

    Georgia also lets for-profit probation companies prey on people too poor to pay their traffic violations and court fees. According to a 2008 SCHR report entitled “Profiting from the poor”:

    In courts around Georgia, people who are charged with misdemeanors and cannot pay their fines that day in court are placed on probation under the supervision of private, for-profit companies until they pay off their fines. On probation, they must pay these companies substantial monthly “supervision fees” that may double or triple the amount that a person of means would pay for the same offense.

    For example, a person of means may pay $200 for a traffic ticket on the day of court and be done with it, while a person too poor to pay that day is placed on probation and ends up paying $500 or more for the same offense.

    The privatization of misdemeanor probation has placed unprecedented law enforcement authority in the hands of for-profit companies that act essentially as collection agencies. These companies, focused on profit rather than public safety or rehabilitation, are not designed to supervise people or connect them to services and jobs. Rather, they charge exorbitant monthly fees and use the threat of imprisonment and a variety of bullying tactics to squeeze money out of the men and women under their supervision.

    For too many poor people convicted of misdemeanors, our state is not living up to the constitutional promise of equal justice under law.

    In Gulfport, Miss., the municipal court started a “fine collection task force” to crack down on people who owed fees for misdemeanors. According to the SCHR Web site:

    The task force trolled through predominantly African American neighborhoods, rounding up people who had outstanding court fines. After arresting and jailing them, the City of Gulfport processed these people through a court proceeding at which no defense attorney was present or even offered.

    Many people were jailed for months after hearings lasting just seconds. While the city collected money, it also packed the jail with hundreds of people who couldn’t pay, including people who were sick, physically disabled and/or limited by mental disabilities.

    The disregard of the justice system for the rights of poor people to equal protection and due process is cause for outrage. But it shouldn’t come as a surprise in an era when the government spends billions bailing out banks while letting foreclosures and unemployment ruin the lives of working people.

    We need to build a movement, like the working-class struggles of the 1930s, that can demand an end to the inhuman practice of incarcerating people for no other crime than finding themselves at the bottom of the social ladder.

  • purplesofa
    purplesofa

    Having just spent a day in a court room recently I saw this happen over and over. People unable to pay fines or probation fees sent to jail. These people live in constant fear of incarceration for the inablity to pay fines.

    This system is all about money and those that have it can survive a mishap with the system.

    For the poor and the rich the fines are the same, but the poor person this can become dibilating. A fine of $100 to some can take food off the table but for another only a drop in the bucket.

    This is causing way more problems than ever necassary.

    Thanks for posting this.

  • yknot
  • sammielee24
    sammielee24
    This system is all about money and those that have it can survive a mishap with the system.

    And that's why Madoff sat in his $7 million dollar apartment after pleading guilty to massive theft while someone who owed a $100.00 fine got tossed in jail for a month. This is why a tea party seems irrelevant right now...sammieswife.

  • purplesofa
    purplesofa

    A few months ago I was with a friend that is studying law, he told me that collections of fines are income to any particular city, and that is to be reported to the IRS as income by the city.( Edited to add: These fines are not reported as income.) Those that are paying these fines can turn that into the IRS and wreak havoc for the bookkeeping departments if reported.

    I have never researched it, but would be interested if anyone knows about this.

    purps

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    Things like this are particularly bad in "southern" states.

    I know for a fact that in East Texas and all of Louisiana the cops like to pull over people from out of state (out of state tags) and people who are not from the area (spotted because they don't know the local roads).

    They will make up BS reasons to pull you over:

    • Illegal Lane Usage - Changing lanes too many times (Impossible to prove or disprove in court)
    • Failing to Maintain One's Lane - Bobbling the line a bit (Impossible to prove or disprove in court)

    Once they have you pulled over they will search your car and any cash or valuables you have will be confiscated as being "suspected drug money or money being laundered".

    For now the safest way to travel with a large sum of money is with Cash Cards. These are similar to credit cards, only they hold a positive balance. What is sad is that some people are trying to pass laws making it legal for the police to search the balances of every card in your wallet and confiscate that money too. Got money in your checking account and carry a debit card? The cops will be able to confiscate it as suspected drug money without any proof what-so-ever.

    The reason the cops do this is simple: They are crooked. They want all sorts of SWAT weapons and small Armored Personnel Carriers to play with (Good-Ol-Boy Adrenalin Junkies... Heeeehaaaa!!), but there is no way they could buy those things using normal tax revenues, so they take money from people driving through town.

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    ...and here's what we'll do to counteract that civil unrest the poor might attempt....ever been to Billings???? First time I read this I went ..whaaaaat? sammieswife.

    New rescue unit unveiled in Billings

    April 14, 2009 07:40 PM PDT

    April 15, 2009 06:42 AM PDT

    New rescue unit unveiled
    Reporting from Billings

    The Yellowstone County Sheriff's Office and the Billings Police Department teamed up today to unveil a new piece of equipment they'll share to help protect the public in crisis situations -- it's black, bullet-proof and is named "The Bear".

    "It's an armored rescue vehicle, we need to be able to get into volatile situations and affect rescues," said Billings PD Chief Rich St. John.

    "For the most part this is a safety issue for both the Billings Police Department tactical unit and our tactical unit," said Yellowstone County Undersheriff, Jay Bell.

    The Yellowstone County Sheriff's Office was a key player in getting this new rescue vehicle, which costs a whopping $385,000, and was funded solely by Home Land Security money.

    "The community is getting larger, we have to keep with the technology that is out there and the technology that the criminals are using," Bell said.

    The vehicle stands about 13 feet high with a capacity of roughly 30 and is more than just a giant piece of armor.

    "This also helps us operate in a contaminated environment, specifically with hazmat or weapons of mass destruction," St. John said. "Our bomb squad will be using this as well."

    Yellowstone County law enforcement serves as a tactical hub for Eastern Montana which is why Homeland Security gave the go-ahead.

    "We've been to various counties on situations when they've need help and needed a tactical team and I think that was one of the selling points," said Bell.

    With the recent acts of violence that have claimed the lives of brave officers around the county, local enforcement say this vehicle will benefit the community and protect those who are committed to keeping it safe.

    The Missoula County Sheriff's Office was on hand today with its police rescue vehicle to assist with training. Billing is the third Montana city equipped with this type of rescue unit.

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    this enrages me

  • PrimateDave
    PrimateDave

    Unfortunately, this all makes perfect sense considering the information presented in this video:

    John Harris - "It's an Illusion"

    John specifically talks about the situation in the United Kingdom, but from other reading I have done, I see the same system is operating in the United States as well.

    Dave

  • Lucky Calamity
    Lucky Calamity

    disgusting

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