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Crime Plan Faces Reality Check

Last week Mayor Frank Melton announced a number of methods to combat crime in the city. "I'm making a change in leadership at the municipal court, and Gayle Lowery, a current city judge, will take over the municipal court effective immediately," Melton announced at a July 25 press conference in what his office is now calling the "oval office" (the square "ceremonial" mayor's office in City Hall).

Lowery will serve as the court's deputy director of administration, a position newly opened to the system, which employs about 50. Melton also said he was respectfully requesting that city judges set bonds at a minimum of $500,000 "for anyone who uses a weapon to assault another human being." Currently, a judge presented with facts on an offender already has the power to issue a $500,000 bond at his discretion.

"We're through setting (bonds) by schedules. That's over," the mayor said. "They have to go before a judge. A judge is the only person who should set a bond, and now they're being set by everybody, by policemen, by the schedule that they have. … By detaining that person for 48 hours with a $500,000 bond, it will allow a judge and a court of law to assess the behavior of this individual and make a decision as to whether he or she wants to let them out on bond."

Melton also proclaimed that the municipal courts were "corrupt."

"I've had certain people who I've dealt with confide in me that there is a scam going on at the municipal court system where they can go down and get their charges erased and get their records dropped. People had interdictions with the Police Department, and they were either arrested or given a citation and were allowed to go to court and not pay the citation but to pay an individual to take them out of the computer, which (cleans their record) when indeed they've probably been arrested 10 or 15 times," said Melton, who added that his suspicions of corruption arose during his time at the helm of Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics.

Melton said he chose Lowery, who will make about $60,000 and keep her private practice as an attorney, because he needed someone he trusted to "clean the place up."

The mayor said he will also request an audit on the court system.

The audit may be easily forthcoming. The $500,000 bond hike, however, might be more difficult to deliver, according to prisoners' rights attorney Ron Welch.

"There's a thing called unreasonable bond," Welch said. "The proper way you get somebody in jail is you prosecute them quick. Give them their due process, convict them and then lock then up."

Welch added that Melton's wishes may end up pitted against those of the Legislature.

"I guess some problems with a uniform bond thing is that it is designed essentially to put the people you choose—as opposed to the people the Legislature chooses—in jail. Now if what they're doing locally is consistent with what the Legislature chooses, then fine. But when you get into the million-dollar bond category, the question is whether that's unreasonable bond and violates the Constitution."

Melton's announcement raised eyebrows at the Mississippi ACLU as well.

"Our concern with the mayor's recommendation is that an increase in the bond amount for certain crimes may violate the 5th Amendment and 8th Amendment rights of an individual," said ACLU Executive Director Nsombi Lambright. "The 5th Amendment guarantees a fair due process to individuals charged with crimes, while the 8th Amendment protects individuals from excessive bail fees."

Lambright argued also that tough-on-crime tactics, with stringent sentencing guidelines and high bonds, don't usually benefit communities.

"The main benefactors are the private corporations that make money off the number of beds that are filled in jails and prisons. Communities benefit from comprehensive crime prevention plans that deter crimes before they happen. Raising bonds presents an unfair burden for indigent people who can't afford a good attorney," Lambright said.

An inevitable consequence of raising bail bonds, according to veterans of the system, is a quick need for additional jail space.

"My background opinion is that anytime you start looking at increasing bonds for anybody, you're going to have to have more jail space," Welch said. "There's no getting around it."

Sheriff Malcolm McMillin has suggested that the city would save money by leaving the jail running to the county, which already has experience with the business. Melton says he has big plans for a new city jail in Jackson, however, touting the almost 50-year-old Human and Cultural Services building on North State Street as a possible holding facility to replace the structurally beleaguered jail on Silas Brown Street. Melton said he intends to convert it into a 150- to 200-bed facility.

Melton said last week he would be moving in a hurry "because the one we've got now is unsafe."

"If I have to borrow cots from the U.S. National Guard, I'll get cots until we can get something more permanent in there," Melton said.

Welch said the city would have to conform to federal standards, and warned that the city has already been found in violation of such standards and that using the old Juvenile Detention Center on Silas Brown Street, as the city is currently doing, is illegal and already violates a court order due to its poor and overcrowded conditions. He said he also questioned the costs of renovating an old building compared to building a new one.

"Traditionally it costs so much more money than building a new one that it's not even funny," Welch said. "And even then you don't get what you need, which is a staff-efficient facility. It's a much more important cost to run a correctional facility and fully staff it than use these old ones and make do. You have increased liability, and you need increased staff to run it, which you're really not going to get, and then with fewer staff, well, bad things always happen."

Melton told reporters that he intended to get inmate labor from the Hinds County Sheriff's Department or to hire Jackson minors to clean out the building through an after-school work program. There may be a problem there as well—acting Public Works Director Thelman Boyd said the building runs a risk of being laced with asbestos, due to its age.

Council President Marshand Crisler said Melton would need the council's approval for the funding of a new jail in any case and said he wondered where the city would get the money from.

"Whenever you're talking about anything new, we have to be creative in terms of funding," Crisler said. "We're all looking pretty slim, and things are looking bleak in terms of funding, so we have to take a strong look at where this (jail) sits as a priority."

Crisler said if the city were to run its own jail, citizens might be expected to commit themselves to new city taxes.

Previous Comments

ID
64672
Comment

This is an extremely informative article. I'll be curious to see how the audit goes if the municpal courts are as corrupt as he thinks. However, I don't see the logic of appointing a current city judge to oversee this audit or department if it is rot with corruption. An independent legal consultant with no ties to Jackson or Melton is a better way of accomplishing his goal of uncovering any corruption within the municipal court system and appearing completely void of any favortism.

Author
pikersam
Date
2005-08-04T08:28:18-06:00
ID
64673
Comment

What is up with Melton's new don't-hire-more-cops idea? I get the need to pay them more, but should we stop recruitment until he can figure out how to get all his Republican donors to support higher taxes?? How does this help fight crime? Is he going to do all the busts himself? (Don't answer that.) There's just a bombshell a day with Mayor Melton, eh? It would be funny to watch The Clarion-Ledger do a near-daily backtrack on him if the implications of such a circus atmosphere weren't so serious for the city. Let's not, in all this though, forget how much responsibility the Ledge holds for all this?with their lack of reporting about what Mr. Melton was actually prone to do. And then there's Crisler. I bet he's starting to wonder why he wanted the Council president job so badly -- being that he's going to have to tell the press near daily that Melton's ideas mean higher taxes. They left that little detail out of the campaign, too, eh? I do wonder if Melton supporters actually believed that the unions would endorse him without the probability of higher taxes in the offing. Or, did they not think through it that far in all the hooping and hollering about "crime perception." (Sigh.) New nickname for The Ledge: The Daily Backtrack (of course, the mayor's office may have that one trademarked).

Author
DonnaLadd
Date
2005-08-04T10:06:31-06:00
ID
64674
Comment

Can our taxes really get that much higher? ;-)

Author
kaust
Date
2005-08-04T12:11:02-06:00
ID
64675
Comment

[quote]"With a significant raise in salary comes a significant change of performance," he said. "I'm not interested in numbers. We need to take care of the people we have."[/quote] Fallacy with no proof. If someone's not performing, they're NOT going to perform... Doesn't matter what kind of carrot you dangle in front of them. Merit raises are the appropriate and functional carrot in this case. [quote]The starting salary for a Jackson police officer is $23,500, which increases to $28,000 after one year on duty.[/quote] Either way, I'd take a $4000 raise for a year's work any day! Jeez, that's not even based on performance according to that sentence. My brother's a police detective and I am all about them being paid well but c'mon! The majority of us are fighting for raises and proper pay not just the police. I'd love to get paid near $30,000 to sit under HWY 18 and I20 with an automated radar sitting on the hood... Seriously, there's a cop there nearly every morning that simply has a radar that tells people how fast they're going on the hood of the car. Talk about a waste. PULL THEM OVER, FINE THEM and GET SOME MONEY INTO THE CITY'S COFFERS! Don't warn them... Don't sit there on my dollar doing nothing at all while a machine warns suburbanites that haul ass into the city every morning. We'll call it a "commuter tax". ;-) They quote nearby cities and the pay of their officers. Doesn't Shreveport have casinos? I'm sure that helps them pay such high wages... Doesn't Memphis too? And don't even throw Atlanta into the mix. That's Apples and PCs. Grrrrr. I just don't get it. Weren't Melton's supporters adamant that JPD was corrupt and full of wrong-doing officers? Why the hell throw raises at a force full of corruption?? Mind you, I'm not saying they're corrupt -- they did. I think Melton said something similar too but don't have time to Google today... I'm just trying to figure out all this logic or illogic going on.

Author
kaust
Date
2005-08-04T12:25:45-06:00
ID
64676
Comment

Wow. Even The Clarion-Ledger editorial board is taking the gloves off today over one of Melton's silly-isms, calling his solution to housing more prisoners "nonsensical": But Melton saying such things as "the city has enough abandoned buildings to house prisoners," and talking about the city taking on the responsibility is nonsensical. ... Rather than bluster, Mayor Melton should be looking at ways to work with the Hinds County Board of Supervisors, the district attorney, judges and state legislators to expand the county's jail facilities and hire more personnel. Good to see The Clarion-Ledger playing a real newspaper today. However, had they done this months ago, perhaps they wouldn't be so surprised at these kind of absurd statements. Again, there is no surprise here. (Posted on two threads because I realized this belonged in this discussion, too.)

Author
DonnaLadd
Date
2005-08-05T08:41:09-06:00

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