Thursday, September 23, 2010
Should Cost be a Significant Factor in Sentencing Convicted Criminals?
Apparently the court system in Missouri thinks so. In her article, Missouri Tells
Judges Cost of Sentences, publsihed in the September 18 New
York Times, Monica Davey reports that "When judges here [Missouri]
sentence convicted criminals, a new and unusual variable is available
for them to consider: what a given punishment will cost the State of
Missouri". According to the article "legal experts say no other state
systematically provides such information to judges, a practice put into
effect here last month by the state’s sentencing advisory commission, an
appointed board that offers guidance on criminal sentencing."
Smart Sentenciing Volume 2 Number 5 August 17, 2010 A Bulletin
of the Missouri
Sentencing Commission includes a discussion of cost of sentencing
as a variable when determining sentences. According to the Bulletin the
Missouri Sentencing Commission has added data about the risk of being
reincarcerated and the costs of sentences to its online application as a
variable to enhance the availability of objective inform
I found it somwhat surprising that "....no other state systematically
provides such information to judges". On alternative for those
interested in pursuing this subjct further would be to start by
following a search I
conducted on the National Center for State Courts website using the
terms cost and incarceration.
David Badertscher
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