Proposition aims to change three-strikes law in CA
Monday, September 13, 2004 at 03:57AM
TheSpook
The stories are out there. The pot smoker, the
pizza thief, the videotape shoplifter who were two-time felons slammed
with life sentences after getting nabbed a third time, committing a
third felony. Such sentences have come down for 10 years, thanks to
California's 1994 three-strikes law, which is designed to punish repeat
offenders. In essence, it works like this: A person with two serious or
violent felonies on his record faces life in prison if convicted of a
third felony, a third "strike." A strike is akin to a black mark on a
criminal record. Get three of them, face 25 years-to-life in prison.
This November, three-strikes law opponents will ask voters to overhaul
the decade-old law with Proposition 66, a ballot initiative that would
require a person's final felony ---- the one that could send him or her
away for life ---- to be serious or violent. Supporters say it's time
to mete out appropriate sentences for crimes. There should be no more
stories of petty thieves locked up for life, said proposition proponent
Jim Benson, vice chairman of the committee that put the initiative on
the ballot. [more ]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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