CRIMINAL JURISDICTION

Criminal Law Blog by Defense Lawyer John Floyd and Mr. Billy Sinclair

December 18, 2010

TEXAS COMMUNITY SUPERVISION REVISITED

Legislative Rush to Punish “Sex” Offenders Removes Punishment Alternatives, Probation, Unnecessarily Increases Prison Overcrowding

By: Houston Criminal Lawyer John Floyd and Paralegal Billy Sinclair

In 2008 we posted a piece about the restrictions the Texas Legislature had placed on the availability of probation. Historically probation was an alternative to penal incarceration designed to give first offenders and minor offenders a second chance.

As the American society entered the industrial revolution of the 18th and 19th centuries, which forced more people to “leave the farms” and relocate into tightly congested urban areas where the manufacturing jobs were, crime increased exponentially, as did the rate of penal incarceration. Probation gradually evolved from the humanitarian efforts of states like Massachusetts to “save the souls” of miscreants with a second chance at life to a necessary sentencing tool needed to divert increasingly more serious offenders away from overcrowded state penal systems. Prosecutors also found probation to be an effective leverage against criminal defendants to get them to enter into “plea bargains” and thereby avoid the costly trial by jury process.

But as violent crime increased probation and its first cousin, parole, became the “whipping boy” for a developing “law and order” movement—a movement whose roots can be traced back to the racial segregation of the Old South. According to the 1935 FBI Uniform Crime Reports, the Southern states had a murder rate of 21.9 per 100,000 people—a rate that was nearly six times the national average. In his book The Mind of the South (Vantage Books 1941), W.J. Cash wrote: “The Negro in the slums was the main, though by no means the whole, explanation for this appalling showing. Police reports and maps for cities like Atlanta and Charlotte (the two which had the highest murder-rate for the South) reveal plainly that the murder line follows the location of black slums with great exactness, that most of the criminal and the majority of their victims are found there, and that the greatest incidence of the crime occurs in exactly the slums where unemployment, crowding, squalor, and want are most prevalent.”

By the 1970s, when the “crime victim rights movement” was established in California, violent crime had migrated from the slums of the South to the larger urban areas across the rest of the country. The militancy of the late 1960s spawned Richard Nixon’s presidential “war on crime” declaration as many Americans had increasingly grown disenchanted with Lyndon Johnson’s liberal social programs known as the president’s “Great Society.”  “States rights” racists politicians of the Old South, led by Alabama Gov. George Wallace, found allegiances with Northern politicians who were seeing one “big city” after another going up in the flames of “race riots.”  Demands for “law-and-order” became a political right of passage.

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November 14, 2008

YES WE CAN

Now what do WE Do with It

By Houston Criminal Defense Attorney John Floyd and Paralegal Billy Sinclair

The “election” is over. Former Illinois Senator Barack Obama is now President-elect Obama. While it was a tremendous victory for the “Audacity of Hope” movement, it was an even greater victory for those who believe that social justice, racial tolerance, political unity, and strong presidential leadership are needed for this nation to heal its daunting economic woes and restore its proper role as moral leader in the world community.

While 48 percent (and 57% of the white voters) of the 131 million people who cast votes in the presidential election did not vote for President-elect Obama, the Illinois Senator told them in his victory acceptance speech that he heard their concerns and would be their president as much as he would be the president of those who voted for him. The nation desperately needs that kind of inclusive leadership.

Yes we can. This nation must find the political will and moral courage to thoroughly reject political partisanship, to find ways to protect the retirement savings of the elderly, to stymie the ruthless pace of home foreclosures, to make the power brokers on Wall Street as accountable as the small business owners on Main Street, and to make sure that every citizen in this country has a reasonable opportunity to secure health care coverage.

Yes we can. The American people have spoken, both loudly and clearly. They believe that Barack Obama is the person who can achieve these lofty but attainable goals. All Americans now have a fundamental civic responsibility to support the President-elect as he undertakes the awesome task of making our individual lives better, safer and more productive. Indeed Barack Obama now has the opportunity to be the Roosevelt of the 21st century just as Roosevelt was the Lincoln of the 20th century and Lincoln the Washington of the 19th century – and we believe he has the incredible gift of intelligence, courage and fortitude to not only seize but fulfill this opportunity. (more…)

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