The crimes that fill the county's cells will continue until the motivation for lawbreaking — drug addiction — is under control, a local man writes.
EDITOR,
With regard to your recent editorial, “Pay for jail or deal with lawlessness” on May 3, yes, building the jail is a priority. But building a new jail will not solve the problems of lawlessness. If the jail releases 4,456 inmates a year, and the new jail will house another 1,280 inmates, isn’t it just a matter of time before the new jail will be overcrowded, too?
Sheriff Steve Moore said no, but I am not convinced. He told us that some 70 percent of the people in his jail are there for drug-related crimes, and those who are released early (sometimes the same day they are arrested) are those who committed what he referred to as quality-of-life crimes — breaking into our homes, stealing our wallets or purses, smashing our car windows while we are at work or shopping, and so on. They are not the violent criminals who make the evening news; they are the ones who trash our daily lives.
And they are doing it to get money to buy drugs. What is needed, in addition to a new jail, is a nationwide War on Drugs to cut off their supply and eliminate the need to commit a crime to buy drugs. I realize this will require a major effort by citizens and law enforcement. Those making and distributing the drugs are well-financed, well-organized and determined, and they do not have to obey the law to achieve their end.
Law enforcement is hampered in its ability to fight back, in that the law has to be obeyed. But if 70 percent of those in jail are there because of drugs, fighting back is clearly what we must do. And we must do it with passion.
By all means, let’s build the new jail and find the money to operate it, but let’s also realize that building the jail is not the solution to lawlessness. We need to stop the flow of drugs that is fueling the crimes that result in lawlessness.
— Bob Young, Tracy
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