Perhaps reading this New York Times story can help people who are not troubled by the harsh 3-strikes laws, understand why it's important for all US citizens to be concerned. The 3-strikes and similar laws are a big contributor to the crisis America is facing in the prison industry - overcrowding, riots, disease, and unjust sentences. I could go on.... It's about time for the law to be reformed.... Here's the NY Times piece....
From the NY Times:
One day last fall, Norman Williams sat drinking hot chocolate with his lawyer, Michael Romano, at a Peet’s coffee in Palo Alto, Calif. At an outdoor table, Williams began to talk about how he’d gone from serving a life sentence at Folsom State Prison to sitting there in the sun....
Williams, who is 46, was a homeless drug addict in 1997 when he was convicted of petty theft, for stealing a floor jack from a tow truck. It was the last step on his path to serving life. In 1982, Williams burglarized an apartment that was being fumigated: he was hapless enough to be robbed at gunpoint on his way out, and later he helped the police recover the stolen property. In 1992, he stole two hand drills and some other tools from an art studio attached to a house; the owner confronted him, and he dropped everything and fled. Still, for the theft of the floor jack, Williams was sentenced to life in prison under California’s repeat-offender law: three strikes and you’re out.
Read the story at BlackPlanet.com
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