Monday, January 31, 2005

Long enough?

It’s amazing how much information you can glean from a short letter, if you just look. On January 31st, 2004 North Carolina inmate #0215851 had a letter to the editor published in the pages of the Raleigh News and Observer. Obviously offender Gregory H. Jones has too much time on his hands! Maybe he’s not had enough dishes to wash at Odom Correction Institute where he is being held in medium (not close?) custody.



Imagine if you were a relative of Jones’ victim(s?). The idea that the man who murdered your loved one and was supposedly “locked away” where no one would let him invade your lives again in 1978 just had his words delivered to your doorsteps today. Unfortunately, a “life sentence” then really hasn’t changed much today even though the lawyers say its “life without parole” and try to persuade folks that it should be enough. Justice isn’t always fair is she?

Aren’t Jones and other inmates like him who read and then write the papers using the media as a means to conduct further attacks on the families of their victims or others they have some grudge against? Some certainly think so. From the courtroom to the prison, and then they “court the media” from prison, for a life term? Isn’t this what’s happening now? What’s surprising is that Jones didn’t use some space in his editorial to complain about prison food or having to work.

How convenient it was that Jones saw fit to justify his own release stating that he’d served more time than he should have. Doesn’t he understand that he waived any rightful claim to parole after committing the first of his violent 103+ infractions behind bars?

Jones is in prison for 1st degree murder and another set of violent criminal offenses. His next review date is September 20th, 2005. It’s possible that the family and friends of his victims have passed or moved away. He committed his murders in the 1970’s.

Why should an offender like Jones even entertain notions of freedom? He’s certainly not been a model inmate. His 103+ infractions include: ACTIVE RIOTER, ASSAULT STAFF W/WEAPON, SUBSTANCE POSSESSION, ATTEMPT CLASS A OFFENSE, WEAPON POSSESSION, NON THREATENING FIRE, PROVOKE ASSAULT, REFUSE SUBMIT/DRUG/BREATH TEST, ATTEMPT CLASS B OFFENSE, MISUSE MEDICINE, PROFANE LANGUAGE, DISOBEY ORDER, FIGHTING, VERBAL THREAT, BARTER/TRADE/LOAN MONEY, ATTEMPT CLASS C OFFENSE, NO THREAT CONTRABAND, CREATE OFFENSIVE CONDITION, ILLEGAL CLOTHING, PROPERTY TAMPERING, UNAUTHORIZED FUNDS, POSSESSION MONEY, UNKEMPT ROOM, and MISUSE SUPPLIES.

Isn’t this (infraction record and the reason he’s in prison) proof to any reasonable person that Jones is and will remain a danger to himself and to others for the rest of his life? Yet each year he will be reviewed because he is “eligible” for parole. The law requires that parole commissioners review Jones’ case at least once a year now, until he dies in prison or is released.
http://www.doc.state.nc.us/parole/truths.htm

The state changes sides in cases like these. The primary obligation of the state now seems to be to make sure that the offender is granted all of his rights and is protected. He must be protected from other inmates (and himself). He is also allowed to voice his opinions in the news. This is at the expense of the relatives of his victims and other innocent North Carolina taxpayers.

So Jones wants to save the State and taxpayers a fortune. It’s quite likely that once released, Jones would cause harm to another victim and be right back where he is today or on death row in Central Prison. This would almost certainly mean that we would have to endure the extra expense of another indigent client and the costs of victimization to another taxpayer (or worse).

Obviously, we should all think twice before performing executions and use the laws and the courts to ensure that only the guilty and most dangerous offenders are the ones who get executed. Some death penalty foes contend that there is no real proof that capital punishment deters potential killers from committing murder. I’d prefer to believe that Jones represents one example of what deterrence can do. He’s not murdered any corrections staff (not yet anyway), but we continue to play the prison version of Russian roulette to pacify those who didn’t want him executed. Jones represents a loaded pistol with the hammer cocked; we are counting on him not to pull his own trigger and to control himself just enough not to actually harm himself or someone else.

Sometimes, (and despite the best efforts of corrections staff) offenders hurt others or become hurt. What incentive is there for an offender like Jones (who is obviously violent) from committing additional crimes? You can take away his television, visitation privileges, and access to the prison canteen and other things with only minimal effect. The only thing of value that this killer has left is the time he has on earth to eat, drink and breathe. The only thing he cares about is his life (not yours or anyone else’s). The threat of taking his life away is what has kept him from murdering again. A moratorium on executions only emboldens such inmates. When Justice blinks, the murderers abuse her.

31 on probation
277 on parole
182 on death row
5019 serving sentences inside NC Prisons

If justice were truly fair, Jones and inmates like him wouldn’t leave prison except to go to into a cemetery plot, and other inmates would be required to dig the hole. It’s too bad that there are more proven murderers who have served time for 1st degree murder who are on probation or parole than there are on death row. Maybe that’s what has motivated Jones to voice his opinions in the Raleigh News and Observer. It’s also a no-brainer that the N&O is probably one of the more popular newspapers in North Carolina prisons. Could this be because the Raleigh News and Observer more often sides with inmates, or confuses them with being victims? Or do many media sources like the N&O ignore victims and victim issues because their primary sources are those who advocate for the condemned or condemnable? I think it’s a little bit of both.

North Carolina legislators are considering a moratorium on executions. They believe that they might be doing the state a service by reviewing the fairness of sentencing of many murderers. Jones and a lot of other killers didn’t get to make it to death row. Is the General Assembly punishing the relatives of victims because we might not be executing often enough? Maybe...


ref:


Published: Jan 31, 2005Modified: Jan 31, 2005 1:15 AM
Long enough
http://www.newsobserver.com/opinion/story/2075907p-8455982c.html
According to your Jan. 8 article "New top-tier prison questioned," the state Department of Correction wants to build another $90 million, 1,000-man prison. Instead, why don't they parole the 2,600 prisoners eligible under the old laws?
The Fair Sentencing Act was in effect from 1980 to 1994. The "pre-fair" laws were before 1980. Some of us have done more than 24 years. I've done 29.
If the state would parole everyone eligible for parole, it wouldn't need new prisons. They could even close a few, and save the state a fortune.
Gregory H. Jones
(The writer, an inmate at Odom Correctional Institution, is serving a life sentence for first-degree murder.)