Pickles, this why people are reacting, not your original post.
In regards to the "case study", that guy did get rehabilitated. To make a long story short, he now has a job, does volunteer work and, instead of costing us $292 a day to keep, he now contributes to society.
As COOPS has said, there are many factors that affect crime rates. In the case of NY in the 90's, unemployment dropped by 39%, the police numbers rose by 35% and there was big improvement in general economic conditions which, combined, were a huge factor in crime reduction.
I actually agree with much of your original post, as I am sure many do. Obviously there are many people that should stay in jail and not see the light of day, as have been named here. But one size does not fit all and unfortunately some judges/panels etc do get it wrong in sentencing.
My younger brother spent 7 months in remand for supposedly breaking an avo. There were several easily proven lies in the ex's statement, he's not perfect, but our mother brought us up better than that and he's a fairly tough character who doesn't need to pick on women to prove he's a man.
He tried to commit suicide twice in jail. It took seven months for him to have his say in our "justice" system. When he did, he was released on the spot. The judge criticised the system Our "justice" system could have kept him jail for up to 2 years before he got to have his say. The fact that she texted him and invited him around to visit the kids was ignored by the cops. There were several other obvious facts that the cops "overlooked". The judge (a retired family law court judge of 35 years experience) was scathing saying that he should never have been locked up as there were several inaccuracies in the statement and the police had wasted court time.
So yes, they get it wrong, but it can go both ways and it is very complex.
Tom.


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