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- Newsgroups: dc.general
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!socrates!ice
- From: ice@socrates.umd.edu (Fredrik Nyman)
- Subject: Re: Protest
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.034754.26139@socrates.umd.edu>
- Organization: University of Maryland University College
- References: <1992Nov15.225457.18380@alw.nih.gov>
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 03:47:54 GMT
- Lines: 36
-
- drury@helix.nih.gov (Richard Drury) writes:
-
- >Safety isn't free. Ignoring the economic aspects of this problem
- >just ensures that it will continue to go unresolved. Take your
- >proposal for example. Locking up all the violent criminals and
- >maintaining them securely for the rest of their lives sounds
- >just great until you try to figure out how to pay for the
- >necessary infrastructure.
- Indeed. But just how much money are we talking about?
- I recall having read that it costs about $750K to keep someone
- locked up for 40 years (vs well over $2M to execute someone; trials
- and appeals are expensive). I suppose that the $750K figure doesn't
- include cost for building the prison though.
-
- Even so, I wonder if a habitual offender, violent or not, doesn't
- cost far more than $750K during his lifetime; the cops who (try to)
- arrest him aren't free. Once he is arrested, he will spend some
- time in jail, courtesy of us tax-payers. We will also pay a rather
- significant amount of money every time he goes to trial, not only for
- court staff but also for his public defender. If he ends up serving
- time, he will get to spend time in prison. After a while, he will
- be up for parole, which means hearings (more $$$). Once he is paroled,
- he will in some cases have to undergo mandatory drug checks as well
- as see a probation officer (unsure about the exact term).
- Meanwhile, his victims (or their families) will get compensation,
- though often from private insurers, not the federal or state government.
-
- I wish I had figures about what it costs to keep a repeat offender
- locked up, vs what it costs to keep him on the streets. As it is,
- I can only *suspect* that it costs a lot more to keep him on the
- streets.
-
- It would also be interesting to know how much it would take in
- preventive actions (in terms of dollars) to keep the repeat
- offender from becoming one in the first place.
-
-