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WSWS : News
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America : The
Brutal Society
California's "three-strikes" law boosts prison population-two
cases in point
By Kim Saito
15 February 2000
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As a result of its three-strikes-and-you're out
law, the state of California has one of the fastest growing prison
populations of any state in the US. The law imposes an automatic
25-years-to-life prison term if a person is convicted of three
felonies. According to the latest figures from the California
Department of Corrections, a record 162,381 people inhabit the
state's prisons. Two recent cases are noteworthy in illustrating
what the courts consider third-strike offenses.
In January, the California Supreme Court unanimously ruled
that someone who pretends to be a dead person may be convicted
of false impersonation, a felony. The case arose in 1998 when
Randolph Lee signed the name of his dead brother to a traffic
citation he received. A few weeks later police stopped Lee for
an expired registration and other traffic violations while he
was driving in Lancaster. When the cop asked for his driver's
license, Lee said he did not have it and again claimed to be his
brother Edward Watson, who died in 1970.
The police officer couldn't find the name on his patrol car
computer, so he brought Lee to the police station. Police then
discovered Lee had an outstanding warrant for driving with a suspended
license and was on parole. Lee was then charged with violating
Penal Code section 529, subdivision 3, a felony. Because of two
prior felony convictions for robbery and assault, the impersonation
charge potentially became a third strike.
Lee said that he was only guilty of a misdemeanor, giving false
information to a police officer. But in the unanimous decision,
the high court ruled that he was guilty of a felony.
Another case involves Todd Givens, 30, who was on trial in
1997 on drug and weapons charges. Assuming that he was on his
way to prison, he got married in a jailhouse ceremony so he could
have conjugal visits. A Tulare County jury subsequently acquitted
him.
Then in December 1999 the district attorney's office charged
him with bigamy because he was legally married to another woman.
Since Givens had two prior felony convictions for armed robbery,
prosecutors turned bigamy, normally punishable by no more than
three years in jail, into a third strike that could
mean 25 years to life.
Three-strikes critic Roberta Robles, founder of Californians
2 Amend 3-Strikes in Orange County, said, "I thought I had
heard it allstealing vitamins, bouncing your own checkbut
bigamy?"
See Also:
Two million incarcerated in the US
[1 February 2000]
The Brutal
Society
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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