Pubdate: Mon, 07 Nov 2005 Source: Cayman Net News (Cayman Islands) Copyright: 2005 Cayman Net Ltd Contact: http://www.caymannetnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3700 Author: Nina Scott PERSONS WHO COMMIT CRIMES SHOULD INDEED BE PUNISHED Dear Sir, Persons that commit crimes should indeed be punished. Our patriarchal society has come up with the idea that hiding them away from the rest of the world is the answer to dealing with criminals. However, what happens when our prisons become too full to accommodate all of those we deem as 'criminals'? We cannot expect to hide the undesirables away forever and have the government pay for them to rot in a cell. Those who have not committed serious crimes are not eligible for long sentences by our system of law and therefore will be let out in a few months or years. When they are let out without any rehabilitative efforts, they are no better than when they began their incarceration. In fact, prison conditions of being out of society, lacking normal socialization and being treated less than human often turns out individuals who are even less capable of normalizing within our society and therefore more prone to continuing their criminal behavior. It is important to investigate the root of what led the individual to commit the particular crime and offer some type of psychological and behavioral modification to ensure that he/she no longer has the desire to commit crime. It is not enough to keep a person locked up and expect that once they are released they will not break the law. In the instance of violent crime there are definite psychological disturbances that cause an individual to feel they should and will go ahead with the crime. For example, a man who rapes a woman may have been sexually abused as a child, he may have grown up in a violent home and developed certain feelings toward women and what he feels is morally right. This does not make the fact that he raped acceptable but without exploring the possible causes and trying to change his way of thinking and behaving, this criminal will be released and will probably commit rape again. In instances of nonviolent crimes we need to look at the individual and assess what social conditions caused him or her to break the law. For example, a person convicted of trafficking narcotics should indeed be punished, but after serving his time and being released into society he will more than likely return to his previous way of life. By looking into what factors influenced his decision to sell drugs, we can offer him rehabilitative guidance to not continue the behavior. Perhaps he grew up in a family where narcotic sales were the norm, perhaps he fell through the cracks of our educational system and found that selling drugs was an easy way to make a living. Whatever the reasons may be, we as a society need to look at these and rehabilitate the human before sending him back into society after serving his sentence. Also, by being able to identify the social ills and psychological inconsistencies that influenced these individuals to commit crimes, we can prepare our youth and begin to take preventative measures with them to decrease the instance of crime. It is easy for us to forget that these people are human. As a law-abiding Caymanian I do not think that criminals should be allowed to walk free and continue to terrorize my people. However, without rehabilitative efforts and preventative efforts we will soon find ourselves surrounded by criminals and prisons. There is an old saying that it takes a village to raise a child. Well sometimes that child turns out to be a criminal and it is only the village to blame. We need to investigate what led the individual to break the law so that we can prevent that from reoccurring in our children. We must also remember that many convicts in Northward and Fairbanks are brothers, sisters, mothers, husbands, fathers, sons and daughters. We need to rehabilitate these people so that they can return to their loved ones and function in society. I believe this is possible. It is only a matter of how much we are willing to work on actual rehabilitation and prevention. We are blessed with a men's prison which offers decent living conditions and a few rehabilitative programs but we still have a long way to go. Organizations need to actively network with each other in their programming and bring these programs to the public so that prevention and rehabilitation are consistent and accessible to all in our society. Nina Scott - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman