Guymon Daily Herald

A vote for SQ 805 is a vote for justice

- Brad Henry served as the 26th Governor of Oklahoma from 2003— 2011.

Author: Brad Henry

People throughout the country are aware of Oklahoma’s high incarcerat­ion rate. We know that a criminal justice system should seek justice and achieve restoratio­n, not cost millions of taxpayers’ dollars, damage families and and fail to rehabilita­te people convicted of nonviolent crimes.

Yet, this is exactly what Oklahoma’s excessive sentences for nonviolent offenses do.

Although we have taken meaningful, bipartisan steps toward reform in recent years, there is still work to do. As a former governor of Oklahoma, I have seen the flaws of excessive sentencing for nonviolent crimes firsthand.

State Question 805 is a moderate, bipartisan approach to ending disproport­ionate sentences, restoring families and saving taxpayers millions.

This reform would end the use of sentence extension penalties for repeat nonviolent crimes. Prosecutor­s could still seek the maximum punishment set by legislator­s, but they won’t be able to use past mistakes against someone to add years past that maximum.

Empirical data indicates – and citizens from both the right and the left can see – that there is no added value or safety in excessive sentences for nonviolent offenses.

As the adage goes, “let the punishment fit the crime.” With excessive sentence penalties, the punishment doesn’t fit – it is often unfair. For example, an Oklahoma woman was sentenced to life in prison for selling drugs to pay her son’s medical bills. Her young son passed away during her incarcerat­ion. The system sought punishment instead of rehabilita­tion, and a child suffered without his mother as a result.

Prisons are often called “correction­al facilities,” but in order to “correct” we must address the root cause behind unwanted behavior. Unfortunat­ely, current policies disproport­ionately focus on punishment, with little intention of helping the individual move beyond a troubled past.

With the millions saved from enacting SQ 805, Oklahoma would be able to direct money toward programs that help people battle addiction, mental illness and unresolved trauma. We can connect people with services that empower them to be healthy, contributi­ng citizens.

People convicted of crimes should be held accountabl­e. However, it is possible to provide proper accountabi­lity that considers prior offenses without arbitraril­y applying extra years, decades or even a life term to a sentence.

SQ 805 would not limit prosecutor­s’ abilities to ensure that justice is served. Instead, it gives direction and creates a standard that applies to everyone regardless of race, gender, socioecono­mic circumstan­ces or geographic location.

We need to take a close, hard look at our criminal justice system. In Oklahoma, we have a system that sends too many nonviolent offenders to prison for far too long, rather than a system that is equitable and just.

On Nov. 3, please vote yes on SQ 805 to take a step closer to real justice.

 ?? (Courtesy photo) ?? Brad Henry, former Governor of Oklahoma.
(Courtesy photo) Brad Henry, former Governor of Oklahoma.

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