Category Archives: Truth in Sentencing

The Leonard Pitts Solution

Two days after Leonard Pitts wrote still another column on the injustices of harsh prison sentences, a New Jersey judge showed him how lenient sentences can also be unjust. Dharun Ravi received 30 days in jail for 15 counts related to using a webcam to spy on his gay college roommate being intimate with a […]

A False Choice: Teachers or Cops

It’s a sad sight when adults sulk like 4-year-olds. When the adults are members of a school board, it’s disturbing. Yet there sat Bobbie Regan this week as the Portland Public Schools Board of Directors voted unanimously to approve a budget that nobody liked. “I want us to remain UPSET so we can take this […]

Rosenblum fails ‘the vulnerable’

Michael Scott Simons confessed to sexually abusing three women with Alzheimer’s disease. Ellen Rosenblum, candidate for Oregon’s Attorney General, let him out of prison. As a judge on the Oregon Court of Appeals, Rosenblum wrote the opinion in 2007 freeing Simons four years after a 98-year prison sentence. Joshua Norman Kelley’s confessions about molesting two […]

Max Williams and the jailbirds

God is smiling on Max Williams. Or at least the media are. After he recently retired as head of the state Department of Corrections, The Oregonian gave Williams a big, wet kiss in a front-page story that said, “Critics of Williams are surprisingly hard to find … .” You wouldn’t know that during Williams’ tenure, […]

Put a Dollar Sign On It

It tells you something that the only public member of Oregon’s Commission on Public Safety is a car dealer. Not that there’s anything wrong with car dealers. (I’ve owned three cars in my life, and two of them were bought from car dealers.) To his credit, Dick Withnell is the only member of the commission […]

Taking Risks With Crime

Like a burglar creeping outside a house testing the windows, Gov. John Kitzhaber has been trying to find a way to get inside the minds of Oregon voters and persuade them to stop locking up criminals. It costs too much, he says. In his corner, Kitzhaber has the Commission on Public Safety, which he created […]

Getting Squishy on Crime

June Buck, with her curly grey hair and thin, gentle voice looks and sounds like the retired Medford school teacher that she is. When she speaks, though, she pushes a lie: Oregon has failed to invest in schools. Buck spoke briefly at the second hearing of the Commission on Public Safety.  She suggested that schools […]

Deep in the Heart of Oregon

Have you ever been the victim of a crime? Was an arrest made? Could you even get the police to take a report? These are not questions that concern the Commission on Public Safety. What they want to know is: How can they persuade ordinary citizens in Oregon that crime is all in their heads? […]

Guilty, But Who Cares?

Three men admit they killed three 8-year-old boys and walk free, cheered on by celebrities and well-wishers. President Barack Obama’s administration announces that it will allow illegal immigrants facing deportation the chance to stay here and apply for a work permit. Two separate events in the same week that carry a similar message: Laws don’t […]

The Appeal of Insanity

For a prison inmate, transferring to a mental hospital is a step up. As a convicted murderer in California explained it to me – in language too blunt for most newspapers – a mental hospital offers two big advantages over prison: “Better drugs and a shot at some pussy.” What he didn’t mention is that […]