PDA

View Full Version : Aging inmates clogging nation's prisons


Saguaro
09-29-2007, 07:26 PM
HARDWICK, Ga. - Razor wire topping the fences seems almost a joke at the Men's State Prison, where many inmates are slumped in wheelchairs, or leaning on walkers or canes.

It's becoming an increasingly common sight: geriatric inmates spending their waning days behind bars. The soaring number of aging inmates is now outpacing the prison growth as a whole.

Tough sentencing laws passed in the crime-busting 1980s and 1990s are largely to blame. It's all fueling an explosion in inmate health costs for cash-strapped states.

"It keeps going up and up," said Alan Adams, director of Health Services for the Georgia Department of Corrections. "We've got some old guys who are too sick to get out of bed. And some of them, they're going to die inside. The courts say we have to provide care and we do. But that costs money."

Justice Department statistics show that the number of inmates in federal and state prisons age 55 and older shot up 33 percent from 2000 to 2005, the most recent year for which the data was available. That's faster than the 9 percent growth overall.

The trend is particularly pronounced in the South, which has some of the nation's toughest sentencing laws. In 16 Southern states, the growth rate has escalated by an average of 145 percent since 1997, according to the Southern Legislative Conference.

Rising prison health care costs — particularly for elderly inmates — helped fuel a 10 percent jump in state prison spending from fiscal year 2005 to 2006, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. That growth in spending is projected to continue, the group said.

The graying of the nation's prisons mirrors the population as whole. But many inmates arrive in prison after years of unhealthy living, such as drug use and risky sex. The stress of life behind bars can often make them even sicker.

And once they enter prison walls, they aren't eligible for Medicaid or Medicare, where the costs are shared between the state and federal government, meaning a state shoulders the burden of inmate health care on its own.

Estimates place the annual cost of housing an inmate at $18,000 to $31,000 a year. There is no firm separate number for housing an elderly inmate, but there is widespread agreement that it's significantly higher than for a younger one.

In addition to medical costs there are other, less obvious expenses. For instance, elderly inmates can't climb to the top bunk so they sometimes need to be housed in separate units that require more space.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1976 that inmates have a constitutional right to health care. But what that means can depend on where an inmate is locked up.

In Alabama, the Southern Center for Human Rights in 2005 filed a federal class action lawsuit to force the Hamilton Aged and Infirm Correctional Facility to improve conditions. Prisoners with serious medical conditions sometimes had to wait several months or more for treatment at the overcrowded facility housing frail inmates with dementia and Alzheimer's, the lawsuit said.

A federal judge in 2006 appointed a receiver to oversee California's prison system after finding that an average of one inmate a week was dying of neglect or malpractice. A new report issued by the receiver found that as many as 66 inmates died last year because of poor medical care.

State lawmakers have been reluctant to tinker with the tough laws that are keeping more people in prison for longer sentences. Reacting to violent crime waves in the 1980s and 1990s, state lawmakers passed two- and three-strikes laws and abolished parole.

They are now seeing the results of those laws, said Ronald Aday, professor of aging studies at Middle Tennessee University who has written a book on aging prisoners.

"This number is going to keep going up and up until they address the issues that are putting these people there in the first place," Aday said.

At Men's State Prison in central Georgia, the older inmates stick together, said Manson Griffin, 66, and Joe Williams, 62.

They rattle off a list of ailments common to men their age: arthritis, high blood pressure, bad backs. Williams wears a neck brace and walks with a cane. Both are taking a laundry list of prescription medications.

Still, Griffin said he's in fairly good condition compared with some of the older inmates at Men's, where the average age is 52 and the oldest prisoner is 86.

"It's heart-rending to see some of the older people in the condition they're in," Griffin said. "You have to wonder why they haven't had a little leniency on them to let them go home?

"What can an 80-year-old man in a wheelchair do? Run?"

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070929/ap_on_re_us/aging_prisoners;_ylt=Ao2FpgrRAgA.j4WLaAPiQfis0NUE

MW
09-29-2007, 07:35 PM
Guess they should have thought out where they wanted to retire to before they did the crime :whistle

Saguaro
09-29-2007, 07:39 PM
They have it easy ..retirement is not costing them a thing, except their freedom

quiet man
09-29-2007, 07:44 PM
maybe they should offer a quicker end to their sentences and solve the problem.

MW
09-29-2007, 07:56 PM
:yeah

Ka-Weenie
09-29-2007, 09:33 PM
Even though I am largely on the fence about the death penalty, I have to admit that this is a good arguement for the death penalty.

Saguaro
09-29-2007, 10:07 PM
We have no idea why these elderly men are in prison .. a death penality , isn't that very harsh ?

Ka-Weenie
09-29-2007, 10:17 PM
It's fair to say many of them were violent crimes that were committed...

Reacting to violent crime waves in the 1980s and 1990s, state lawmakers passed two- and three-strikes laws and abolished parole.


I don't think we should kill the old man who stole some Tucks medicated pads from the pharmacy. But in my opinion, it's obvious that the problem exposed in the above article is directly related to the fact that the death penalty has been underfire and therefore all but completely done away with in the states.

The Q
09-29-2007, 11:28 PM
It's fair to say many of them were violent crimes that were committed...



I don't think we should kill the old man who stole some Tucks medicated pads from the pharmacy. But in my opinion, it's obvious that the problem exposed in the above article is directly related to the fact that the death penalty has been underfire and therefore all but completely done away with in the states.

Never let anyone tell you that you're not a humanitarian, KW.

:rofl2
:rofl2
:rofl2

ADQ

Melissa l
09-30-2007, 08:09 AM
If they were in there for first degree murder, child abuse, or rape then give them lethal injection and put them out of their misery. That should take care of half their problem right there. Just because they have gotten old does not eliminate the crime they committed when they were younger. They should start with Charlie Manson..........

Oceanbreeze
09-30-2007, 10:00 AM
So, in short, society is still paying for their crimes? The famous or infamous Sheriff in AZ, whichever you chose, charges inmates $63 a day to stay at his jail. NOW THAT'S A PLAN and the pink undies. :theman

"And once they enter prison walls, they aren't eligible for Medicaid or Medicare, where the costs are shared between the state and federal government, meaning a state shoulders the burden of inmate health care on its own.

Estimates place the annual cost of housing an inmate at $18,000 to $31,000 a year. There is no firm separate number for housing an elderly inmate, but there is widespread agreement that it's significantly higher than for a younger one.

In addition to medical costs there are other, less obvious expenses. For instance, elderly inmates can't climb to the top bunk so they sometimes need to be housed in separate units that require more space."

ElKarlo
09-30-2007, 08:12 PM
The prison systen in racist anyway, their are far more blacks and hispanics in prison because they dont get fair legal representation. Release the innocent or the ones there because of their enviorment and the population will be cut in half. No one can say all the blacks or hispanics in prison are guilty of crimes, many are there because of racist cops and juries on the GW Bush plan.

April15
09-30-2007, 08:52 PM
The prison systen in racist anyway, their are far more blacks and hispanics in prison because they dont get fair legal representation. Release the innocent or the ones there because of their enviorment and the population will be cut in half. No one can say all the blacks or hispanics in prison are guilty of crimes, many are there because of racist cops and juries on the GW Bush plan.The prison system is just the end result of a national disgrace in human compassion. As for those in jail I do believe it is about 85% or so drug related incarceration rate. The whites are the killers while the blacks are the drug users. I have been in so I think I might have some insight on the subject. The pervs are whites.

My stepson is a black male that is on the city payroll. He is a lead worker in the street dept. He was stopped by the city police because he fit the description of a person who held up a bank. He was black. He was still in work uniform with Burlingame city logo and such. That the police even rousted him from the car and searched him is an insult.

The police chief did apollogise to him.