In discusiion of chapter 19, I learned that there is a high rate of incarcerated offenders in the justice system. Some offenders are released early and placed on parole. The caseloads of officers are overloaded. The average parolee have fines that they can not pay due to poor resources in the community. Many are released early because the prisons are overcrowded and punishments are used to deter crime. The punishments of the offenders are taken serious but often times are released on a lesser sentence. Many are place on community service orders which only seems like helps the wealthy offender. Intensive orders such as house arrest is to prevent the offender from trying to commit a crime. They will not have interaction with the community. As the justice system make decisions to determine the appropriate punishment, guideline must be followed. The prison rates are continuously increasing with inmates. …show more content…
These inmates need more care than the average inmate. They cannot adjust to the prison lifestyle. The aging inmate cost is more expensive. The elderly have more health issues than the average inmate. The elderly are release on medical parole because of a terminal illness. They differ than a younger inmate. So many individuals await to renter in the community. The book states 1,600 a day have left state and federal prisons to go home. But still the numbers are growing for incarcerated criminals. Even with some released on parole the cases for officers are overwhelmed and they are not supervised. The prisoners that have struggled with drugs are place in a pre-released program to prepare them for their release. I think the justice system hands are tied a little bit to maintain the prisons and community well