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The Punitive and Predatory Cost of Going to Jail

This short video takes us on a trip through the criminal justice system and highlights a “hidden form of punishment” directed toward incarcerated people: fees. At every turn, people who are sentenced to incarceration are subject to tens of thousands of dollars in fees: bail fees, public defender fees, filing fees, court costs, mandatory contributions to funds like the state police fund, room & board, phone calls, money transfer fees, medical co-pays, and fees for post-incarceration monitoring. This is on top of any penalties that are paid by offenders.

We’re not talking about fines, those monetary punishments that judges impose on offenders. And this isn’t about restitution, which is an additional sanction intended to reimburse victims. Fees are far more insidious, functioning like predatory taxes that raise revenue for the government. They can vary from state to state, municipality to municipality, institution to institution.

And they can have severe economic consequences, particularly for people who are already broke when they enter the system — that is, most people who run afoul of the law. The resulting debts can destroy people’s credit, prevent them from voting and interfere with their ability to find employment and housing.

And guess what? People in debt turn to crime to pay their bills. This is all just another way that America’s criminal justice system is punitive and not rehabilitative.

Discussion  3 comments

Manqueman

Little more than the tip of the iceberg re how incarceration destroys lives. Too often, any sentence is a life sentence if not capital punishment. (By and by a bipartisan policy we enable and support by our electoral choices.)

Such a hateful nation lacking any respect for human life...

Colter Mccorkindale
Mike Riley

I have such a hard time with criminals, how we “punish” them, how much we spend on the prison system, and how it hurts everyone (the criminals don’t usually get reformed and their dependents get screwed). The only upside to incarceration is that the criminals are physically out of our lives (usually temporarily).

I feel like I’m fine with Escape From New York style prisons for hard criminals (repeat offenders, violent rapest, murderers, etc). I would also like first time offenders and petty criminals to get help, like actual assistance and guidance. I don’t know the cost per inmate but I believe it’s in the area of $100,000 per inmate per year. What do we, the law abiding citizens get for that investment? I think if you spend two years in prison you’ll exit the system in worse circumstances than how you entered. It would be ideal if you did your time, paid your dues, and when your time was up you were given real help and opportunity to succeed.

Then, if you repeat….. Escape from New York

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