| Criminal Justice |
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As the economy sours, education fails, and access to quality health care dries up, we see increases in local crime statistics. As a result, our jails and prisons are overcrowded and we see too many criminals turned out to the streets before serving an appropriate sentence. Punishment alone is not sufficient as a deterrent. My approach to solving these and other problems as they relate to our judicial system is based in my experience as a problem-solving engineer (addressing root causes instead of symptoms), my years in community service, and my work with police departments and sheriffs' offices. Addressing the socioeconomic causes of crime in our society would allow our law enforcement agencies to focus on more critical areas of justice, including white-collar crime and sexual predators. When criminals are incarcerated, they are no longer benefiting themselves or society. They are not earning wages and paying taxes, it costs taxpayer money to incarcerate them, and if they have unsupported family members, then many times those family members must sustain themselves on welfare. I would support the following approaches to crime prevention and reducing recidivism rates in Colorado:
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