Mike Schmidt: Since the 1980s, changes in the law have contributed to the growing numbers of women in prison in #Oregon. @OregonCJC#WIPConf
Mike Schmidt: Some of those changes such as #Measure11 (1995) created mandatory minimum sentences for certain crimes. No good time, no sentence reduction, no matter what. @OregonCJC#WIPConf
Senate Bill 1145 created an agreement between the State of Oregon and the counties that anyone serving more than a year would go to a state prison. @OregonCJC#WIPConf
Mike Schmidt: House Bill 3078 AKA the Safety & Savings Act in 2017 was designed to address the growth in the number of women in prison in #Oregon. #WIPConf@OregonCJC
@OregonCJC Mike Schmidt: #Oregon is 23rd in the nation for the rate of women's incarceration. Women's prison populations have grown dramatically all over the U.S. #WIPConf@OregonCJC
@OregonCJC Mike Schmidt: Women's arrest rate for "person" crimes has dropped 33%, property crime rate has dropped 49% 1995-2018. #WIPConf@OregonCJC
@OregonCJC Mike Schmidt: Women's incarceration rate in #Oregon has increased 174% 1994-2019. Men's over the same period has increased 75%. #WIPConf@OregonCJC
Mike Schmidt: Top 5 crimes sending women to prison right now are car theft, burglary, theft, ID theft, delivery of meth. These top 5 represent 41% of women entering prison. #WIPConf@OregonCJC
Mike Schmidt: Forecast shows decline in women's prison population over the next decade. For the first time in 6 yrs there are no temporary emergency beds at Coffee Creek. #WIPConf@OregonCJC
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🚨Did you know that Oregon has NO minimum age of prosecution for kids? Tomorrow, we have a chance to change that when the House Judiciary Committee holds a public hearing on HB 2327, a bill we’re supporting to introduce a minimum prosecution age of 12.
From 2017-2021, more than a thousand Oregon children aged 7-11 had some form of contact with the juvenile justice system or were in a situation where they could be arrested, charged, and prosecuted in juvenile court.
Subjecting children to the court process and putting them in juvenile detention is harming them. They will face more barriers to education and employment and their physical and mental health will worsen. BIPOC, LGBTQIA+ and low-income children are disproportionately affected.
New York City is not alone. There is a gap between the media coverage of shootings and the number of incidents in Portland.
This then, leads the public and lawmakers to call for increase police budgets and number of officers on the streets. Let's call it what it is: Copaganda.
The increase in gun violence that we have seen over the last two years has little to do with police budgets and staffing, but rather, has a direct correlation to the Covid-19 pandemic and economic burden it has placed on communities.
We know that investing in upstream services and investing in infrastructure such as street lighting and traffic calming barrels has reduced violent crime, while the number of officers has not shown any correlation with the number of crimes in Portland.
This report from Independent Police Review is called "Lessons Learned: City's response to protests exposed vulnerabilities in Portland's police accountability system," but we don't think the lesson has been learned. portland.gov/sites/default/…
"Hundreds of hours of video footage showed repeated incidents of officers resorting to physical control methods with both passive protestors and aggressive resistors."
The report does not include that Oregon legislators rolled back teargas and impact munition restrictions this past legislative session in 2022.
"Despite what you may hear in the local news, neither violent crime or property crime is spiking in the city."
On houselessness, and addressing serious concerns in safety: "What we are seeing is the result of 30+ years of public disinvestment in social services, increase in police budgets, and an economic model that has benefited the few, at the expense of many."
Overall crime rate in the last seven years stayed fairly steady, with a slight increase after the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic. The average in the last seven years is still sitting at 84% of crimes being non-violent. (that's as far back as the website goes)
🧵 "Where are we now? From Black Lives Matter uprising to tough-on-crime backlash, and what's happening in Portland."
A timeline:
1960s: Civil Rights Movement
1960s-1970s: Tough-on-crime rhetoric & declaration of War on Drugs
1970s: Onset of mass incarceration and drastic increase in policing
2013-2020: Black Lives Matter Uprising
Now: Increased tough-on-crime rhetoric & policies
Shortly after the Civil Rights movement in the 1960s, widespread tough-on-crime narratives rolled in the creation of the New Jim Crow- mass incarceration.