Fall Issue Preview: STUDYING PRISON REALIGNMENT IN REAL TIME

California's Realignment project art

The photos flashing on the screen required little explanation, though Michael Bien offered it anyway to students assembled for their third meeting of the fall quarter‘s Advanced Seminar on Criminal Law & Public Policy: A Research Practicum.

“Areas that once provided recreation space are now lined with bunk beds, some three high. The dormitory is jammed with hundreds of prisoners, many suffering from mental illness, contagious disease a constant threat. Broom closets have been turned into medical units, and makeshift metal cages lined up along the walls and in hallways serve as holding cells for prisoners on suicide watch.”

The photos displayed for the students were some of the same submitted by Bien and his co-counsel to the U.S. Supreme Court as evidence in Brown v. Plata, in which the Court ruled that California must bring its prison system’s extreme overcrowding under control.

That ruling put immediate pressure on California by ordering that the prison system’s population be reduced by approximately 30,000, to 137.5 percent of its capacity by 2013 (it has been as high as 200 percent of capacity). AB 109 is the state’s response to that pressure. Signed into law by California Governor Jerry Brown last spring, it shifts responsibility for certain lower-level offenders from the state to county authority in what is called “realignment.”

“This is the most dramatic change in criminal sentencing that California has undertaken since passage of Determinate Sentencing in 1977, and no other state has tried it,” says Joan Petersilia, Adelbert H. Sweet Professor of Law and faculty co-director of the Stanford Criminal Justice Center (SCJC). “We were bloated and dysfunctional but this is very dramatic.”

The legislation offers counties an unprecedented amount of flexibility in most areas of community supervision, including sentencing and early release for low-level offenders, alternative sanctions (ankle bracelets, substance abuse rehabilitation, etc.), supervised probation and parole, and delivery of social services. “This could be a game changer,” says Petersilia. She explains that the current situation is untenable, even from a purely budgetary standpoint: The cost of California’s prison system has risen from 4 percent of the budget in the mid 1980s to more than 10 percent today. Yet recidivism is at 70 percent—the highest in the country. The hope is that funds redirected to counties will be put to more effective use in programs that stop that vicious cycle. “This could have far- reaching changes.”

It also presents a unique learning opportunity for Stanford Law School students.

The idea for the student seminar came about last year when California Attorney General Kamala Harris asked Petersilia to work closely with her to study the state’s recidivism problem. Petersilia had to beg off—after all, she has to teach—but suggested that the project be made into a class. Harris agreed. When AB 109 passed, the project narrowed in focus and also took on greater urgency: The new legislation does not include funding for study, and there is no plan for comprehensive research into how each of California’s 58 counties will address realignment. The class will fill some of that gap by studying one county’s efforts to implement the legislation, providing what 
Petersilia and Harris hope will be a model for best practices.

“This is a unique opportunity for us in the California Department of Justice to partner with Joan, who is the leading thinker nationwide on these kinds of criminal justice issues,” says Michael Troncoso, acting chief deputy attorney general.

A nationally recognized criminologist, Petersilia has immersed herself in issues related to realignment for the best part of 25 years, focusing primarily on reentry. An empiricist who was the director of the Criminal Justice Program at the RAND Corporation, her expertise is politically neutral—and highly sought. She has served as a special advisor to Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, helping to reorganize adult corrections and working with the California State Legislature to implement prison and parole reform (she was standing next to him at the signing ceremony for AB 900, which authorized nearly $8 billion for prison construction and rehabilitation initiatives). She chaired Governor Schwarzenegger’s Rehabilitation Strike Team and was also co-chair of California’s expert panel on offender rehabilitation programs. Governor Brown quickly sought her advice after taking office.

“We’re a little bit off the map with this legislation,” Troncoso adds. “And the person everyone turns to on an issue like this when undertaking such a dramatic shift in responsibility is Joan. Can she help draw the map? And that’s what she’s doing, helping policymakers start to draw the map, showing us what makes sense, what is working or can work.”

It’s the scholarly opportunity of a lifetime for Petersilia and her students to explore the broad implications of the groundbreaking legislation in real time, as it is rolling out.

While working closely with the AG’s office, Petersilia knew the seminar needed the input of officials at the frontline of this change. She asked Santa Clara County to allow her students to conduct their research there—in their courts and halls of government. The county agreed. Now other counties are looking to Petersilia and the students’ projects—hoping that the work they produce provides useful guidance on what is working and what isn’t—and soon.

“Any time we can utilize the intelligence of Stanford Law School students we only see an upside,” says Gary Graves, COO for Santa Clara County. “We have a lot of professionals working here who have been in this business for a long time. We hope to get a fresh perspective and the enthusiasm of students.”

Petersilia calls the class a “makeshift policy institute,” with students treating the AG and Santa Clara County’s Community Corrections Partnership (CCP) as their “clients.” Topics for study were suggested by Governor Jerry Brown, leaders in the prison system at the local and state level, as well as the class’s two clients. Matthew Cate, secretary of the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, will visit the class late this month and share his insights, as will Harris and other key players working on the issues. Students will explore a variety of crucial questions: How does AB 109 affect the courtroom work group? Do offenders really access more local services with decentralization of supervision? What are the legal barriers to successful reentry into society for things such as housing? What does the new offender in county jail look like—is the profile very different from before AB 109? And so on.

When asked why they signed up for the seminar, the students’ first answer is the same: to study with Petersilia, to learn from her. While not all of them will follow Petersilia into the criminal justice policy field, they see tremendous value in her instruction.

Malaina Freedman, JD ’12, and two classmates are focusing their research on the effect of AB 109 on the courtroom.