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  • doublebuck
    Banned
    • Jul 2011
    • 529

    state inmates being release to county jails

    What do you guys think of it? I think it's stupid and waste of time.
  • #2
    yzErnie
    CGN/CGSSA Contributor - Lifetime
    CGN Contributor - Lifetime
    • Mar 2007
    • 6307

    Here's what I think. It is my opinion that the good citizens are getting tired of the state's inability to be finacially prudent. The good citizens of the community I work in have told the City Counsel they are not willing to tolerate the behavior of those being released. It's time for the good people to stand up for themselves and be heard.
    The satisfaction of a job well done is to be the one who has done it

    Originally posted by RazoE
    I don't feel a thing when some cop gets ghosted.

    Comment

    • #3
      WILDMAN442
      Senior Member
      • Jan 2010
      • 1665

      Theyre being released back into the COUNTY. Not just jails.

      Parolees are going to be supervised by Probation officers. I dont know about down south, but in my county, we are VERY shorthanded as it is.

      Its going to be a whole new world for us very soon.

      Justin
      Originally posted by MHShooter
      The whole time I was thinking "perfect calguns story"

      Comment

      • #4
        Hunt
        Veteran Member
        • Sep 2009
        • 4833

        just one more reason to end the abysmal failure of prohibition. Resources could be used to cage the really dangerous and the violence associated with illegal substances would go away. When will the politicians wake up to these simple facts?
        Protect public lands access http://www.backcountryhunters.org/

        Comment

        • #5
          dustoff31
          Calguns Addict
          • Apr 2007
          • 8209

          The LACO DA doesn't seem at all happy about it. The article goes on to say that the Probation Dept is a little more optomistic assuming increased funding and personnel.


          Los Angeles County's top prosecutor is predicting doom and gloom with a prospect of thousands of convicted felons being diverted to the county's jail system rather than state prisons.


          "Did I say "republic?" By God, yes, I said "republic!" Long live the glorious republic of the United States of America. Damn democracy. It is a fraudulent term used, often by ignorant persons but no less often by intellectual fakers, to describe an infamous mixture of socialism, miscegenation, graft, confiscation of property and denial of personal rights to individuals whose virtuous principles make them offensive." - Westbrook Pegler

          Comment

          • #6
            yzErnie
            CGN/CGSSA Contributor - Lifetime
            CGN Contributor - Lifetime
            • Mar 2007
            • 6307

            "We’re going to experience the greatest spike in crime"...that has to be the BIGGEST understatement of the century so far.
            The satisfaction of a job well done is to be the one who has done it

            Originally posted by RazoE
            I don't feel a thing when some cop gets ghosted.

            Comment

            • #7
              Kinsel83
              Senior Member
              • Jan 2011
              • 987

              No inmates are being released into county under the post release community supervision program. Effective 12 last night, any person arrested or convicted of non violent, non serious, non sex offender will stay in county. Any person given a term from 3yr to 50 yrs. There's the prcs program and acp program. Acp is a inmate elegible for home detention because they are a caregiver or basically head of household. Actually only a few qualify in regards to female inmates.

              Comment

              • #8
                Kinsel83
                Senior Member
                • Jan 2011
                • 987

                This prcs program will most likely fail like last years nrp program. Non revocable program. That was cancelled recently.

                Comment

                • #9
                  p7m8jg
                  Senior Member
                  • Dec 2007
                  • 1914

                  The L.A. DA is not running for DA again - that means he's running for state office - again. Anything he says is suspect - he's just feathering his political nest.

                  The state poly-tics-shuns screwed how they handled CDCR and failed at their job. They should all be fired and replaced for incompetence. We need to change to a one house legislature working part time on only those things that are necessary. That way they can't do as much damage.

                  Crime will go up - it has to. Crooks don't change once they're crooks, at least very few do. Very, very few. The state is dumping it back in the locals laps so they won't get sued any more. That's the only reason they're doing this. To avoid being sued any more in SF Federal court. The liberals will have to sue in local county court now - or at least the closest federal court. It's all about avoiding liability.

                  Comment

                  • #10
                    Bigtwin
                    Veteran Member
                    • May 2010
                    • 2639

                    Originally posted by WILDMAN442
                    Theyre being released back into the COUNTY. Not just jails.

                    Parolees are going to be supervised by Probation officers. I dont know about down south, but in my county, we are VERY shorthanded as it is.

                    Its going to be a whole new world for us very soon.

                    Justin
                    God I am not looking forward to this!
                    NRA MEMBER

                    Comment

                    • #11
                      freonr22
                      I need a LIFE!!
                      • Dec 2008
                      • 12945

                      The electronic monitoring program (ankle bracelet) in Santa Clara county is $49/ day. Instead of taxpayers paying buttloads of money to house the inmates if it's a lower offense, I'm all for the INMATE paying the fees. They can work, and go home. The payments are set up based on income, low income=$300/mo payment... It makes sense to me
                      sigpic
                      Originally posted by dantodd
                      We will win. We are right. We will never stop fighting.
                      Originally posted by bwiese
                      They don't believe it's possible, but then Alison didn't believe there'd be 350K - 400K OLLs in CA either.
                      Originally posted by louisianagirl
                      Our fate is ours alone to decide as long as we remain armed heavily enough to dictate it.

                      Comment

                      • #12
                        freonr22
                        I need a LIFE!!
                        • Dec 2008
                        • 12945

                        Wow! I have not seen those types of limited penalties. All the ones I have seen in Monterey and Santa Clara counties for bottling dirty or being late once on the emp, maybe one x slap, after that went to prison
                        sigpic
                        Originally posted by dantodd
                        We will win. We are right. We will never stop fighting.
                        Originally posted by bwiese
                        They don't believe it's possible, but then Alison didn't believe there'd be 350K - 400K OLLs in CA either.
                        Originally posted by louisianagirl
                        Our fate is ours alone to decide as long as we remain armed heavily enough to dictate it.

                        Comment

                        • #13
                          TheExpertish
                          Veteran Member
                          • Jul 2011
                          • 3451

                          There's going to be a lot of problems. Probation officers have a hard enough time keeping track of the guys they already have. Crime rates are going to go up. Way up IMO. I wonder if we can sue a ACLU when the s*** hits the fan?
                          sigpic
                          Originally posted by starsnuffer
                          It's an HK, I could lube it with sand and superglue and it'd work just fine.

                          Comment

                          • #14
                            weimarccw
                            Member
                            • Jul 2010
                            • 126

                            Not an LEO, but work non-sworn in an LEA. This shift is supposed to be a paradym shift. Texas and others have been doing business this way while reducing recidivism for some time. Will it work here, who knows. Probation has seen most of the offenders they will get back. Will counties make changes to address needed programs?

                            The piece that many have overlooked that causes me the most concern is the fact that the violent offenders, sex offenders and serious offenders still under State parole supervision will no longer serve their violations in State prison. They will serve time for violations in the county jail. School's in session. I wouldn't want to be a county jail CO for anything........
                            CA, Nevada & Utah CCWs
                            Front Sight First Family Member
                            NRA and CRPA Member
                            USCCA Member

                            Comment

                            • #15
                              anthonyca
                              Calguns Addict
                              • May 2008
                              • 6316

                              Originally posted by weimarccw
                              Not an LEO, but work non-sworn in an LEA. This shift is supposed to be a paradym shift. Texas and others have been doing business this way while reducing recidivism for some time. Will it work here, who knows. Probation has seen most of the offenders they will get back. Will counties make changes to address needed programs?

                              The piece that many have overlooked that causes me the most concern is the fact that the violent offenders, sex offenders and serious offenders still under State parole supervision will no longer serve their violations in State prison. They will serve time for violations in the county jail. School's in session. I wouldn't want to be a county jail CO for anything........
                              There should be a way to keep first timers and low level offenders away from career criminals. School is in session alright. Those hardened guys will run other inmates and some kids who did something stupid will have to raise their game to survive. Now he is an instant pile of crap that we have to pay for life.

                              No easy answer here. Have any jails ever segregated hardened criminals from first timers or someone who had a failure to appear on a traffic warrant?
                              https://www.facebook.com/pages/Union...70812799700206

                              Originally posted by Wherryj
                              I am a physician. I am held to being "the expert" in medicine. I can't fall back on feigned ignorance and the statement that the patient should have known better than I. When an officer "can't be expected to know the entire penal code", but a citizen is held to "ignorance is no excuse", this is equivalent to ME being able to sue my patient for my own malpractice-after all, the patient should have known better, right?

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