Let's Stop the Annual Prison Population Swap!

Milton C. Jordan,Sr.
From California to New York, from Michigan to Arizona, from Maine to Florida, about 600,000 criminals walk out of the nation's state and federal prisons every year and move into our communities. One of the most recent recidivism studies reveal that more than 75 percent of them return to prison within three years. The study, however, does not explain what happens to the other 25 percent--about 150,000 individuals. Do they change? Do they become contributing citizens? Chances are that most of them do not become contributing citizens. You see, if 150,000 former prisoners every year began the arduous trek from crime to contribution, we would begin downsizing the prison industrial complex. Instead, prison populations grow continually and studies project more of the same.

A recent report from the Public Safety Perfomance Project, financed by the Pew Charitable Trusts, drew the following conclusions:

1. The nation's state and federal prison population will reach 1,722,477 by 2011--an increase of approximately 192,000 over a five-year period.

2. This rate of growth--about 38,400 more inmates per year--is markedly higher than the growth rate of the past three years.

3. The prison incarceration rate will continue to grow, from 491 per 100,000 U.XS. residents in 2005 to 511 per 100,000 in 2006, than to 562 per 100,000 in 2011.

4. The Western region will have the largest prison population increase (18 percent) while the Northeast will experience the smallest growth (7 percent).

This next statistic boggles the mind. Pew reports: "Almost two-thirds of the estimated 600,000 plus people who are admitted to prison are those who have failed to complete probation or parole."

Did you catch that?

Yes, we release about 600,000 every year, but at the same time, we imprison another 600,000. We break even!

It's clear that many of those 600,000 who go to prison each year are repeat offenders who were released last year, the year before that, or the year before that.
So the question becomes how do we shatter this incredibly expensive cycle of crime, conviction, incarceration, release and crime?

Is it possible? Can it be done? Is there a systematic process by which criminals can become community contributors?

Unequivocably yes! It's not easy! But criminals can do it. I know. I did it!

I launched my crime career when I was five-years-old by stealing $5 from my aunt's pocketbook. Thus for 20 years, I did something criminal almost every day. Imprisoned when I was 17-years-old, I spent more than 80 of the decade's 120 months in North Carolina's prisons. Released December 9, 1968, I've spent 39 years learning how to change, how to make the arduous trek from crime to contribution.

I summarize the process this way! To change, a criminal must:

1. Break the crime habit
2. Earn an ever-free
3. Achieve the crime and prison record into insignificance
4. Teach and train others to duplicate his or her efforts

I will deal with each of these steps to change in subsequent articles, but now please understand that the families and loved ones of criminals (FLOC) play critically important roles in this proces. More on that later, too.

See you at success.

Published by Milton C. Jordan,Sr.

I am an anti-recidivism specialist! Released from prison on Dec. 9, 1968, I've spent the past 43 years learning how to break the crime habit, earn an ever-free life and achieving my crime and prison records...  View profile

15 Comments

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  • Dakrat7/7/2007

    Thanks for writing this from your personal perspective. I've written a couple of papers about the prison systems in this country and personally believe the system is broken, and the focus on imprisonment is misplaced. However, I cannot speak with the authority of one who has overcome, like you. I believe the key is to focus on prevention and rehabilitation. And frankly, I do not believe that the prison system is set up to prevent or rehabilitate (as is evident in part by the high rate of recidivism). Again, thank you for writing this article.

  • A. Kairi7/6/2007

    thanks for writing this. I can see you'll be an inspiration for so many people. i personally think that our rates of incarceration will drop significantly if we start treating drug addiction like the public health problem that it is instead of treating it as a crime.

  • Secretsides7/6/2007

    Dear Milton, I applaud and honor you, you are a miracle. Please continue to writeyour experiences, you can enlighten many with your articles. My son has been in prison 4 times and each time the time and the offense is worse. He is 37 and pretty well institutionalized, drugs and alcohol, violation of probation the inability to still sober. Where are the treatment programs and the rehabilitions for criminals? I know some will not change, but you cant treat people like animals and expect them to act like humans. Hopefully this time he will make it, I can only pray, he is going to a half way house, he has lived with us in the past and it is not an option this time. Tough love. God bless you dear man and keep writing!!

  • Lorraine Hayden7/6/2007

    Very interesting and well written article. I find it a shame how more money is spent on the prison system than on drug rehabs here in NYS. Also let me add you are a inspiration to many of the young people out there today. So many young people get dicouraged by the lable a prison sentence puts on them, but through strength and determination they too can make it. Welcome to AC and keep the good articles coming:)

  • William Pinn7/6/2007

    Can't wait to read your follow-up articles.

  • Saba,Ink7/6/2007

    P.S. I'd be interested to see you address and learn about the companies on the stock market that are supported primarily through the prison industrial complex...things that make you go "ummm?!?" Big business in criminals or honest attempt to reform? I'll wait for your perspective.
    See you at the TOP!

  • Saba,Ink7/6/2007

    Thank you for dropping by my page.... It has allowed me to discover the world of Milton Jordan!
    You are definitely "dropping science" in your pieces. Looking forward to reading more of your stuff. Again, Welcome to AC!

  • Kristine Doherty7/6/2007

    That was a great article. People can certainly change if they really want to and if they have help on the outside. This is a subject I know little about and I look forward to reading more articles of yours. :-)

  • Brandee Teer7/5/2007

    thanks for sharing. I was recently released from jail so I understand exactly where you are coming from.

  • eiffelvu7/5/2007

    thanks for the interesting information..I really had no idea

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