Nicholas Chagnon is a senior lecturer at UH Manoa in the Departments of Sociology and Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. He teaches criminology and sociology courses, and researches topics such as police reform and gender violence.
Meda Chesney-Lind is a professor emerita of Women鈥檚 Studies at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. She is also a past president of the American Society of Criminology.
Colleen Rost-Banik is an instructor at UH Manoa in the Department of Sociology. She also teaches sociology and creative writing courses at the Women鈥檚 Community Correctional Center.
Punitive approaches to minor offenses will only exacerbate the challenges faced by Hawaii鈥檚 criminal justice system.
State Senator Sharon Moriwaki, along with several other legislators, has introduced a bill to ramp up criminal punishment in Hawaii. would reclassify misdemeanor assault as a class C felony upon a third conviction for the offense.
Moriwaki鈥檚 bill aims to address genuine concern over crime in Hawaii, including 鈥渃atch and release鈥 policies. However, this misguided idea will only double down on a punitive approach that we long ago learned is costly, ineffective, and counterproductive.
Those defending the bill might point to recent events, including Sebastian Mahkwan鈥檚 horrific attack on Danying Zhang, a teacher at Maryknoll School. Mahkwan threw an unidentified chemical on Zhang, causing severe burns and disfigurement.
The unprovoked attack was terrifying enough, but it was even more alarming considering that Mahkwan has a long criminal history and was released on bail for charges related to a previous assault only a day before.
Such cases elicit outrage among the public, which is compounded when police bemoan repeatedly arresting the same individuals only to see them on the streets shortly after. No doubt, our criminal justice system doesn鈥檛 efficiently deliver public safety.
The system often fails to hold accountable those who pose a threat to public safety, while many who pose no such threat languish in our jails and prisons. But SB 2347 only increases punishment, it does nothing to enhance real accountability or rehabilitation. Thus, it offers little potential to mitigate crime but would exacerbate other problems including prison overcrowding, violence, and offender recidivism.
Moriwaki鈥檚 bill is essentially a habitual offender law. These bills have been around for decades.
The most well-known variant is the Three Strikes law, which requires a person who has been convicted of a third offense to serve a mandatory 25 years to life sentence in prison. Three strikes laws are notorious for their (often arbitrary) punitiveness. One oft-cited example involves a man sentenced to 25 years for stealing a slice of pizza from a child.
In the case of SB 2347, the crimes in question are relatively minor. Misdemeanor assault is a far cry from cases like that of Mahkwan, which was charged as first-degree assault and attempted murder.
Mixed Evidence For Deterrence
Those supporting habitual offender laws argue that they are a tough deterrent policy. Moriwaki cited this rationale regarding her bill, but it鈥檚 a dubious argument.
There鈥檚 mixed evidence for deterrence. Studies find that increasing the severity of punishments has at best a modest deterrent effect, and the harshest policies tend to be the least effective.
Furthermore, research on mass incarceration in general indicates that it made only a minimal contribution to the historic crime decreases documented across the U.S. since the early 1990s. Any deterrent effect must also be weighed against the costs of deterrent-based policies, economic and social. They鈥檙e not effective justice policy, though they make for good political theater.
We must also consider that under Moriwaki鈥檚 bill 鈥渢he prosecution shall not be required to prove any state of mind with respect to the person鈥檚 status as a habitual violent misdemeanor offender.鈥
Effectively, this means being of sound mind is inconsequential when someone commits an offense. This bill creates the pretext for long-term incarceration of houseless people who experience chronic mental illness, extracting vulnerable people from their communities rather than providing them assistance.
There are promising alternatives though, some of which are already being implemented locally. The Hawaii prison system is, in theory, being overhauled into a more rehabilitative framework to provide offenders with the resources, support, and skills they need to desist from crime.
This includes utilizing restorative justice practices, which, informed by indigenous notions of justice, are more effective than traditional criminal justice, as studies suggest lower recidivism with the use of restorative justice.
Restorative justice repairs harms between people and communities, implementing accountability rather than simply punishing. Moreover, promising programs like the Crisis Outreach Response and Engagement program and drop-off sites need to be fully funded, implemented with care, and expanded. Legislation to these ends is being considered this session.
For example, sponsored by Rep. Della Au Belatti would establish a behavioral health crisis center pilot program in the Department of Health to redirect persons experiencing a mental health crisis who are involved with, or at risk for involvement with, the criminal justice system to the appropriate health care system and services.
Hawaii has tried the mass incarceration approach exemplified by habitual offender laws for decades. These punitive shifts have had dramatic consequences; in just four decades Hawaii鈥檚 combined jail and prison population increased 670%, and the incarceration rate increased 400%.
More punitive approaches to minor offenses, as proposed by Senator Moriwaki, will only exacerbate the many challenges faced by Hawaii鈥檚 criminal justice system.
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Nicholas Chagnon is a senior lecturer at UH Manoa in the Departments of Sociology and Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. He teaches criminology and sociology courses, and researches topics such as police reform and gender violence.
Meda Chesney-Lind is a professor emerita of Women鈥檚 Studies at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. She is also a past president of the American Society of Criminology.
Colleen Rost-Banik is an instructor at UH Manoa in the Department of Sociology. She also teaches sociology and creative writing courses at the Women鈥檚 Community Correctional Center.
"This includes utilizing restorative justice practices......as studies suggest lower recidivism with the use of restorative justice."Surprise surprise - someone has finally seen some light!! Check this out - "Aboriginal Justice/Teachings: Indigenous peoples around the world, including Native American and Canadian First Nations civilizations, have long practiced restorative justice principles. Their approaches emphasize healing, community involvement, and reconciliation."
BIkarma·
10 months ago
Hawaii will never be a "three strikes and your out" state. They aren't even a "20 strikes and your out" state. I would like LE to publish everyone's criminal history when they are arrested. People would be surprised at the amount of individuals walking around that have stolen 20, 30, even 40 plus cars. And let's not forget the dudes that have been arrested 100 plus times. Hawaii is soft on criminals! Really good example: Letting guys out during COVID cause they didn't want them to get COVID in jail. How about not committing a crime? Sounds easy to me. They didn't think the dumb criminals would "catch" on to that? They did. And would laugh about it every time they got arrested. No one's going to jail for taking a slice of pizza. Give me a break. Unless they violated their probation/parole. But then they go back, not for the theft, but the violation, of which they were well aware of. Not that hard to not commit a crime. It really isn't!
Ducky·
10 months ago
Strong on crime, if you offend, do the time. One ... two ... three strikes you're out, at the old ball game.
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