Document Type
Article
Language
eng
Format of Original
50 p.
Publication Date
2016
Publisher
J. Reuben Clark Law School, Brigham Young University
Source Publication
Brigham Young University Law Review
Source ISSN
0360-151X
Abstract
In the space of a few short years in the 1990s, forty-two states adopted truth in sentencing (“TIS”) laws, which eliminated or greatly curtailed opportunities for criminal defendants to obtain parole release from prison. In the following decade, the pendulum seemingly swung in the opposite direction, with thirty-six states adopting new early release opportunities for prisoners. However, few of these initiatives had much impact, and prison populations continued to rise. The TIS ideal remained strong. In the hope of developing a better understanding of these trends and of the prospects for more robust early release reforms in the future, the authors conducted public opinion surveys of hundreds of Wisconsin voters in 2012 and 2013 and report the results here. Notable findings include the following: (1) public support for TIS is strong and stable; (2) support for TIS results less from fear of crime than from a dislike of the parole decisionmaking process (which helps to explain why support for TIS has remained strong even as crime rates have fallen sharply); (3) support for TIS is not absolute and inflexible, but is balanced against such competing objectives as cost-reduction and offender rehabilitation, (4) a majority of the public would favor release as early as the halfway point in a prison sentence if public safety would not be threatened, and (5) a majority would prefer to have release decisions made by a commission of experts instead of a judge.
Recommended Citation
O'Hear, Michael M. and Wheelock, Darren, "Imprisonment Inertia and Public Attitudes Toward "Truth in Sentencing"" (2016). Social and Cultural Sciences Faculty Research and Publications. 153.
https://epublications.marquette.edu/socs_fac/153
Comments
Published version. Brigham Young University Law Review, Vol. 2015, No. 2 (2016): 257-306. Permalink. © 2016 BYU Law Digital Commons. Used with permission.