The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #102522   Message #2078595
Posted By: Rapparee
16-Jun-07 - 09:50 AM
Thread Name: BS: DNA Why shield criminals?
Subject: RE: BS: DNA Why shield criminals?
Here is a question I'd like answered, and I'm dead serious. But first, some facts from US Department of Justice:

In 2005, over 7 million people were on probation, in jail or prison, or on parole at yearend 2005 -- 3.2% of all U.S. adult residents or 1 in every 32 adults.

and also, from the same source:

Two studies come closest to providing "national" recidivism rates for the United States. One tracked 108,580 State prisoners released from prison in 11 States in 1983. The other tracked 272,111 prisoners released from prison in 15 States in 1994. The prisoners tracked in these studies represent two-thirds of all the prisoners released in the United States for that year.

Rearrest within 3 years

    * 67.5% of prisoners released in 1994 were rearrested within 3 years, an increase over the 62.5% found for those released in 1983

    * The rearrest rate for property offenders, drug offenders, and public-order offenders increased significantly from 1983 to 1994. During that time, the rearrest rate increased:

          - from 68.1% to 73.8% for property offenders
          - from 50.4% to 66.7% for drug offenders
          - from 54.6% to 62.2% for public-order offenders

    * The rearrest rate for violent offenders remained relatively stable (59.6% in 1983 compared to 61.7% in 1994).

Reconviction within 3 years

    * Overall, reconviction rates did not change significantly from 1983 to 1994. Among, prisoners released in 1983, 46.8% were reconvicted within 3 years compared to 46.9% among those released in 1994. From 1983 to 1994, reconviction rates remained stable for released:

          - violent offenders (41.9% and 39.9%, respectively)
          - property offenders (53.0% and 53.4%)
          - public-order offenders (41.5% and 42.0%)

    * Among drug offenders, the rate of reconviction increased significantly, going from 35.3% in 1983 to 47.0% in 1994.

Returned to prison within 3 years

    * The 1994 recidivism study estimated that within 3 years, 51.8% of prisoners released during the year were back in prison either because of a new crime for which they received another prison sentence, or because of a technical violation of their parole. This rate was not calculated in the 1983 study.


We can say with some confidence that 3.2% of the US adult population are criminals. Sure, it might be more or less, but the figure won't vary much either way. And of course this figure includes recidivists, who make up approximately 52% of those in prison.

Why then should 96.8% of the population "suffer" because 3.2% break the law -- and of that group of lawbreakers more than half are repeaters?

Hey! Why not create a database of the DNA of the lawbreakers, just as has been done with fingerprints!

Oh, wait. The US is already doing that. So is Australia, Canada, the UK, and Interpol.

Never mind.