Saturday, August 26, 2017

GIT R DONE: Why throwing more money at cops won't help.

There was recently a spate of shootings and related retaliatory violence in Madison, Wisconsin, where that sort of thing isn't supposed to happen.

This morning, Chris Rickert, a columnist for whatever is left of the local media, posted an editorial which has some remarkably backward thinking in it.   The gist of Rickert's editorial (that link leads to the whole thing) appears to be that long-term action is useless and we should devolve to a police state because that GITS THINGS DONE.

Seriously: The piece's title is "Madison do-gooders haggled over shootings police stopped." It begins "provocatively":

Madison’s mayor and City Council spent valuable time this spring and summer feuding among themselves and with local activists over how to respond, ahem, quickly to a rash of shootings.
Madison Police Chief Mike Koval on Aug. 9 announced plans to round up those suspected in the violence and two weeks later announced that the shootings had largely stopped...


Wait for it...

— at least for now.

The best problem solving is always temporary! Rickert went on to ask why the cops hadn't just arrested the bad guys BEFORE they committed the shootings, and when I questioned Rickert's commitment to creating a pre-crimes unit at the MPD he suggested the police already had warrants for the future-shooters and could've just picked them up.

Rickert's piece plays up the notion that all we have to do is GIT THINGS DONE by throwing more money at the cops. He talks about how all the money already thrown at social programs aimed at ending violence haven't stopped ALL THIS VIOLENCE and whether it's worth it to try again.  This is the same fatalist debate that people use to argue guns ought not be outlawed: people will still HAVE guns won't they? Can't turn back the tide might's well just let people do what they want.

The argument that something has not worked at 100% capacity is a false argument. First of all, my computer crashes about 10 times a week. According to Rickert's philosophy, since all previous fixes have not corrected the problem permanently, I should go back to an abacus. Secondly, NO law or social program is 100% effective. Kids fail school. Murders happen even though murder has been illegal since Moses broke the tablets. The internet hasn't yet killed local newspapers. So just because social programs haven't ended all violence is not a reason to simply say "well they failed SADDLE UP BOYS WE'RE FORMIN' A POSSE."

Rickert talks about how the cops don't have the resources to track down the 8000 outstanding warrants MPD has, and finishes his piece with this bon mot:

[The chief] doesn’t think the shootings have stopped for good. But given how much police have been able to accomplish in a few weeks of targeted effort and overtime, it’s hard not to wonder whether violence could become less prevalent if the mayor and City Council were slightly more receptive to Koval’s calls for more resources.

The well-intentioned social progressives who  run Madison don’t like to consider it, but there may just be some hardened criminals who can’t be reformed by anything paid for by government or carried out by Madison do-gooders.

None of which is to say the do-gooders shouldn’t keep trying.
But if all the trying fails, it’s nice to know something as simple as more policing hasn’t.

So piece that out: we need only "slightly" more resources -- in an unknown amount -- thrown at the police to achieve... what? Rickert's piece admits the police DO NOT THINK THE SHOOTINGS HAVE STOPPED. That undermines Rickert's whole thesis: quick action achieved a temporary lull at best and maybe achieved nothing at all.

More importantly, it is not a matter of SLIGHT increases in resources.  Give the police 8,000 more men, say, one for each of those warrants. Those guys go out and arrest EIGHT THOUSAND people in the Madison area.

The Dane County Jail, where MPD keeps criminals awaiting charging who have not been released, has 341 beds and 24 segregation cells. Maybe we could just put 25 guys in each bed.  Or, if we still consider human rights, what would happen is at least 7,659 arrestees would be IMMEDIATELY released back out on the streets on some form of bail or signature bond. At least that would give the 8,000 new cops something to do: they could monitor them! And arrest them and release them again if something new happens!  Catch And Release as law enforcement.

Once those 8000 guys are booked, they will have to be arraigned.  Dane County has 17 judges and about 8 court commissioners who can do initial hearings and other LEGALLY REQUIRED steps in prosecuting cases.  One Dane County judge recently commented -- ON THE RECORD -- about how more and more accused were demanding speedy trials (it's only a constitutional right, after all) and that was placing a burden on the court system.

Those 8000 guys will need lawyers. Most criminal defendants get public defenders. In Wisconsin, the public defender system is so overburdened it led to the Seattle University of Law releasing a study in which it described Wisconsin's system as "Justice Shortchanged."  Public defenders in Wisconsin are paid $40 per hour by the state. Average overhead per hour for a lawyer in Wisconsin is just over $41, so assigned counsel public defenders barely make ends meet. I won't go into what that means because I don't want to demean the GOOD lawyers who do that work. But there simply aren't the resources to dump 8000 new cases onto public defenders and private lawyers willing to do pro bono or extremely cheap work.

But maybe you're one of those people who doesn't think the criminals deserve lawyers and all that liberal do-gooder nonsense. Even for you, there's problems: Wisconsin's prosecutors are overburdened and underpaid. In 2016 a study said Wisconsin needs at least 140 more prosecutors -- about 2 per county. District attorneys described what they do  as "a public safety crisis" and "essentially malpractice."

Hey, guys -- here's 8000 MORE CASES to prosecute.  Have fun!

This "crisis" it should be noted is almost ENTIRELY the fault of the Republican party.  While Wisconsin's criminal justice system and law enforcement was already in trouble in 2008, the GOP has controlled Wisconsin since 2010 and it was in 2016 and 2017 that the nation began to notice just how truly bad Wisconsin's justice system is. So much for law and order, right? Republicans talk a good game but don't back it up.

It's easy to write up six quick paragraphs about how we need to GIT THINGS DONE. It's a lot harder to actually try to understand the systemic problems that lead to an 8000-warrant backlog, and even harder to understand the failure of a nation to even TRY seriously to undo the terrible educational, social welfare, and medical 'systems' we have allowed to develop. We do a terrible job of helping people get educated, find work, take care of their children, get medical care, stay off drugs, and generally be good people. Anyone wanting to fix any of those systems runs into billion-dollar opposition from the Republican party, and gets no help from a Democratic party that has given up and exists solely to promote the good of a few people within it.

All of THOSE problems are worsened by editorials which make no effort to investigate the facts or understand the problems, but instead just blithely suggest that if we were willing to just pay the cops a bit more everything would be all right.  People read those things, and believe them, and it makes it harder to fix things. It is a failure of the media to publish that kind of drivel.

6 comments:

Andrew Leon said...

Louisiana is having a similar problem with not being able to fund defense attorneys and the like. And that's related to the Republican governor Bobby Jindal and his nearly blatant attempt to bankrupt the state by giving all of its money to his wealthy buddies.

Andrew Leon said...

Oh, and I had some other things to say but, really, you caught them all up in your Future Crimes Division comment, so I'm just going to leave it at that.

Now I want to go watch Minority Report...

Briane said...

I saw a documentary about the issue, "Gideon's Army." It was well done, but very sad.

Like Minority Report.


I'll be here all week, folks

Liz A. said...

Anything that purports to have a simple solution to a complex problem is of course missing the point. But try telling that to these guys.

Briane said...

And if you do get across to them how complicated it is, they just shrug and say well it's too complicated to address so why bother?

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