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Tribal advocates keep up legal pressure for fair political maps; 12-member jury sworn in for Trump's historic criminal trial; the importance of healthcare decision planning; and a debt dilemma: poll shows how many people wrestle with college costs.

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Civil rights activists say a court ruling could end the right to protest in three southern states, a federal judge lets January 6th lawsuits proceed against former President Trump, and police arrest dozens at a Columbia University Gaza protest.

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Report: Time to Rethink OR's Mandatory Minimum Sentences

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Wednesday, March 16, 2011   

SALEM, Ore. - Oregon's system of mandatory minimum sentences for criminal cases has not done what its backers promised. That's the finding of the nonpartisan Oregon Criminal Justice Commission in a new report about Measure 11, the mandatory sentencing law passed in 1994.

Measure 11 was touted as a crime deterrent and a way to increase the consistency and predictability of sentences. Instead, the report says it has increased the number of plea bargains and cost the state more money.

David Rogers is executive director of the Partnership for Safety and Justice, an advocacy organization working on public safety issues in Oregon. He says these findings are overdue.

"After 15 years of implementation, it's definitely time for a comprehensive study like this. You know, Measure 11 has dramatically changed the nature of Oregon's criminal justice system. It's driven massive prison growth and it's cost the state billions of dollars."

The report says Measure 11 sentences are responsible for 64 percent of all the months that people spend in prison in Oregon – and that if it had not passed, the state would have needed almost 3,000 fewer prison beds. (The findings are online at www.oregon.gov/CJC/docs/Measure_11_Analysis_Final.pdf.)

Much of the report focuses on how the criminal justice process in Oregon has shifted as a result of Measure 11. It says more power is now in the hands of prosecuting attorneys rather than judges, and it cites significant differences between counties in the ways criminal cases are handled. Overall, Rogers thinks the law has decreased transparency in the system.

"In a range of ways, Measure 11 has done actually the opposite of what it promised. It dramatically increased the number of plea agreements - so really, the majority of cases are getting resolved behind closed doors, and not in the courts."

Rogers notes that, since Measure 11 was passed, Oregon's Corrections Department budget has quadrupled. Now that the state is facing a $3.5 billion budget deficit, he believes lawmakers should consider reforming the minimum sentencing law.



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