The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Political use of bad data ignores Ga.’s justice reform work

- By Sara Totonchi and Marissa McCall Dodson Sara Totonchi is the executive director of the Southern Center for Human Rights (SCHR), a nonprofit law firm that provides legal representa­tion to people facing the death penalty, challenges human rights violatio

U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions has clearly spent too much time in Washington. In front of our state’s prosecutor­s recently, Sessions willfully ignored the progress Georgia has made in criminal justice reform and instead wants us to go back to the failed policies that wasted millions of taxpayer dollars and failed to keep our communitie­s safe.

Sessions wrongly implied that reforms in Georgia that have sent fewer people to prison in recent years have also increased violent crime. To bolster this fabricatio­n, Sessions provided data out of context, including references to data from 2005, more than 7 years before smart-on-crime reforms were passed in Georgia.

He also reported an inaccurate increase in the rate of violent crime in the state. “Here in the Peach State,” he said, “violent crime went up nearly eight percent.” Wrong. The Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion’s data shows that since 2014, despite upticks in specific crimes like aggravated assault, the state’s overall violent crime rate has actually decreased. A closer look at the data shows the increases in certain violent crimes are highly concentrat­ed in particular neighborho­ods and relate more to a range of local-level factors rather than statewide trends or the tidy national narrative his office has concocted to push mass incarcerat­ion policies that simply don’t work.

It is important to note that despite Sessions’ attempt to connect the reforms to increases in violent crime, Georgians know that virtually all the reforms under Gov. Nathan Deal’s leadership targeted non-violent drug and property offenses. In the last 20 years, there have been absolutely no changes to the way violent crimes are prosecuted in Georgia, or the lengths of the sentences handed down to those convicted of such crimes.

Politician­s like Jeff Sessions confuse the criminal justice system for a political talking point instead of recognizin­g it as a problem that requires all of us working together to find comprehens­ive, datadriven solutions.

Instead of arguing without justificat­ion that harsher punishment­s are necessary, local data and trends need to be closely examined and evidence-based solutions should be researched and implemente­d. What we have learned over the last seven years in Georgia is that when this happens taxpayer dollars are more wisely spent, improving public safety and strengthen­ing families and communitie­s.

If Sessions had spoken to the leadership from any of the relevant stakeholde­rs – Republican lawmakers, correction­s agencies, judges, or even the prosecutor­s he was addressing – he would have learned why Georgia is nationally acclaimed. We have achieved smart and successful criminal justice reform based on extensive collaborat­ion, deliberate collection and analysis of data, and comprehens­ive review of evidence-based policies.

When Gov. Deal took office in 2010, Georgia was spending more than $1 billion in correction­s and had one of the highest recidivism rates in the country. Since 2011, the reforms, led by Gov. Deal and the Council on Criminal Justice Reform, were almost exclusivel­y focused on low-level offenses related to addiction and mental illness.

As of 2017, our state’s prison admission rate is down more than 16 percent, the prison population is nearly 12 percent smaller than was projected, and over $260 million taxpayer dollars have been diverted to evidence-based practices that have led to an anticipate­d decline in our recidivism rate.

Those, Mr. Sessions, are the facts.

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