The Pros And Cons Of Mandatory Minimum Laws

460 Words1 Page

Furthermore, the overcrowding of prisons from the plethora of offenders being put into prison under the mandatory minimum laws are creating issues of its own. According to the Law Enforcement Leaders, since the 1980s, the federal inmate population has grown more than 400%, since the 1990s, the average stay in prison has risen 36% and now, prisons are 39% beyond their capacities. With the overpopulation of prisons, comes the issues of health concerns for the inmates and the unrightfully treatment of the inmates as well as racial disparities (“Reforming Mandatory Minimums,” 2016). According to The Sentencing Project, “today, there are more people behind bars for a drug offense than the number of people who were in prison or jail for any crime …show more content…

In addition, the number of guards compared to inmates are extremely low due to overcrowding. Since there are less guards within the prison, they have to take precautions to keep themselves as well as other inmates safe, which could lead to severe violence that results in the injury or death of either (Davidson, 2012). Since the mandatory minimum laws have become a large controversy, the number of incarcerations within the past decade have decreased, but yet, people incarcerated under these laws make up about 56% of federal inmates. In 2010, there were 108,022 prisoners incarcerated under the mandatory laws and in 2016 it decreased 14% to 92,870 prisoners (“Mandatory Minimum Sentences Decline, Sentencing Commission Says” 2017). But, the issues of imprisonment under the mandatory minimum laws have also created issues regarding the three-strike rule, which states that at any circumstance of getting in trouble, whether it be another drug conviction or littering, would resort back to incarceration specifically under these

More about The Pros And Cons Of Mandatory Minimum Laws

Open Document