Mississippi House Speaker Philip Gunn said recently that “Corrections is the most pressing issue we have now.”
Gov. Tate Reeves said in his inauguration address “it means cleaning up corrections—to provide for the safety of our citizens and the human dignity of all within the system.” For years I have been clanging the alarm about the disaster in our prisons. It’s heartening to see our state leaders acknowledging the awful situation. Let’s hope they can figure out what to do.
Two years ago, several prison reform groups sued the Mississippi Department of Corrections in federal court. The trial went on for weeks. I realized the trial would be an amazing opportunity to see inside our prisons. I don’t have much excess time, but I spent dozens of hours in Jackson’s downtown federal building listening to testimony. I was appalled.
I wrote at the time, plain and simple, that two Chicago-based gangs, the Vice Lords and the Gangster Disciples, are running our prisons. MDOC denied it.
Two years later, nobody is denying this awful truth. Mississippi Today, the Clarion Ledger and Jerry Mitchell’s Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting have written excellent in-depth stories chronicling the horrible conditions of our prisons. We are moving backwards.
Anyone who knows me, knows I favor efficient, limited government and free market solutions. But there are certain aspects of a civil society that the government simply must maintain. A functioning, fair legal system is probably at the top of the list. Without law and order, our society descends into chaos.
Prisons are the ultimate enforcement tool of law and order. If government loses control of its prisons, it loses control of law and order and it loses control of society. That’s where we are.
Nobody intended it to be this way. It was simply benign neglect. One Republican theory of government is to “starve the beast” as a means of controlling out-of-control government growth. But starving the prison beast didn’t make the problem shrink. The beast got hungry and broke its leash and is now running wild. It will be a much longer, harder and more expensive journey to get it back under control.
What did I learn at the trial? Half the people in the East Mississippi Correctional Facility are mentally ill. They were locked in solitary confinement without medications. They were beaten, starved and abused. They could go weeks in the dark. Broken plumbing. No medical care. The locks didn’t work. Prisoners roamed freely. The gangs ruled the roost and decided who stayed where. Half the guard positions were unfilled, yet MDOC never once fined the private prison companies per the agreement.
When you allow the gangs to function both in the free world and in prison, they have total control. If you want to know what the world looks like when you allow gangs total control, just look south to Mexico. I have no doubt the skyrocketing Jackson murder rate is somehow related to the rise of gang power and violence now that they control our prisons.
Imagine taking a poor mentally ill person who needs medication and throwing them into a gang-controlled hell hole. You may recall our savior Jesus’ warning. What you do to the prisoner, you do to me.
How did this come to pass? First of all, prisons have always been hell holes, but we were making progress. In fact, a decade ago the feds gave control back to the state because of the progress.
Then came the move toward private prisons. Not a bad idea in concept, but the execution was horrible. The state took the lowest bidder and then didn’t enforce the terms of the contract. To make money, the private companies cut staff and made a deal with the gangs. You help us run the prison, we will look the other way on contraband. It all occurred slowly, incrementally, like the lobster in the boiling pot.
As it stands, it can be a death sentence to send someone to our decrepit prisons, yet Mississippi has one of the highest incarceration rates in the world, thanks to a variety of legislative mandatory sentences. These legislative sentencing dictates have backfired.
Step one: Repeal the mandatory sentencing laws and let our judges and DAs, who are closer to the ground, make these judgement calls. Step two: Quit sending drug addicts to jail. Get them to treatment instead. Step Three: Use house arrest with tracking bracelets for non-violent offenders. Step Four: Turn our prisons into places of order, control and rehabilitation instead of gang-run free-for-alls.
Reach Wyatt Emmerich at wyatt@northsidesun.com.