California prisons to stay tortuously overcrowded
California Department of Corrections officer looks on as inmates at Chino State Prison exercise in the yard (AFP Photo / Kevork Djansezian)
Prison officials in California have a problem with overcrowded
institutions, but it isn’t what you might think: unable to keep their
facilities under 137.5 percent capacity, corrections officers in Cali
are asking for an increase in that cap.
California authorities have had more than a year now to try and find a
solution to fix the state’s booming prison population, but as of this
week say that they don’t expect to end an issue with overcrowding until
even well into 2013.
In May of 2011, the US Supreme Court said
that overcrowding was such an issue in California that the conditions
prisoners were being subjected to there were on par with “cruel and unusual punishment.”
At the time, the Supreme Court said California had two years to come to
terms with the problem and ensure that all institutions on the Golden
Coast were kept under 137.5 percent capacity. State officials now say
that such a goal is unlikely — even with another year until their
deadline — but a federal court says they want to see what is being done
to address the problem.
In a last-ditch attempt to end its overcrowding problem, a panel of three federal judges say California has until this Friday to figure out which of its prisoners are "unlikely to re-offend or who might otherwise be candidates for early release,” the Los Angeles Times reports.
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