New Orleans Shifts Focus to Major Crimes
(Update: New Orleans has long been the incarceration capital of the U.S., imprisoning more people per capita than anywhere else in the country. But in a vote on February 3, the city council approved a new 1,400 bed jail that is less than half the size of the decaying facility it will be replacing, rejecting a proposal from the sheriff to build an even bigger jail after dozens of Change.org members and other activists urged them to consider alternatives to incarceration.)
New Orleans continues to make great strides toward a more focused -- and more efficient -- criminal justice system.
Last month, the city council voted to allow police officers to issue tickets -- rather than make arrests -- for low-level, non-violent crimes. This is a major shift for a city that has long lived a sort of double-life between the anything-goes vibe of the French Quarter to the quick arrests and tough sentences for crimes both minor and major.
As a report from the city's Metropolitan Crime Commission found in December, New Orleans police in recent years have arrested thousands of people over things like traffic tickets, minor warrants from other jurisdictions and other offenses not likely to ever make it to court. And while law enforcement and court resources are expended on the paperwork of these minor offenses, attention is distracted from major crime investigations. Although violent crime dropped in New Orleans in 2010, it could fall much further -- and these reforms will help make that happen.
Elizabeth and I have both written about these reforms, and more than 140 Change.org members have sent New Orleans' leaders a petition urging them to reconsider plans to expand the parish prison. Avoiding one-day jail stays for minor offenses could free up money from the jail expansion and from the red tape that follows every arrest. Those funds could instead be spent on crime prevention, alternatives to incarceration and law enforcement work on the cases that really matter. Add your name to the petition here.
Last month's city council decision builds on an earlier move by the Louisiana legislature to allow city police to use discretion on minor warrants from other parts of the state. Last year showed some improvement -- people arrested in New Orleans were more likely to actually be charged with something than in previous years when frivolous arrests would be tossed out after a day in jail.
With the new city council vote and a major shift in the police department's strategy and philosophy, 2011 could continue to move this focus in the right direction. Now, the city needs to change its thinking on the proposed jail expansion.
Image Credit: amanderson2







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