HOW TO THINK ABOUT IT
Home free. Iran grabbed global headlines earlier this month when it temporarily freed tens of thousands of prisoners as the coronavirus outbreak spiraled out of control. The U.S. followed suit: More than a dozen states have freed thousands of low-level, sick and elderly prisoners. But those left locked up — and the staff members tasked with guarding them — face impending shortages of everything from soap to medical facilities. “We’re all headed for some dire consequences,” one former prison warden told the Wall Street Journal. In New York City alone, 38 inmates have tested positive for COVID-19; disgraced Hollywood producer and convicted sexual assailant Harvey Weinstein is reportedly among them.
Chance for change. As prison officials and rights advocates push for an urgent response to the imminent challenge, many are already finding solutions. Jails in Arizona and Minnesota, for instance, have waived medical co-pays and fees for personal hygiene supplies — partially meeting a longstanding demand for better, more sanitary conditions in prisons. Elsewhere, such as in Maine and Oklahoma, courts have dropped or suspended warrants for petty offenses like unpaid fines or white-collar and property crimes. If the pandemic is “a magnifying glass for all the problems in the criminal justice system,” according to one public defender, then maybe it’s an opportunity for America’s long-beleaguered incarceration system to do some serious soul-searching.
Cutting crime — or encouraging it? Meanwhile, some are wondering what effects the pandemic will have on the prevalence of law-breaking. In New York, for instance, it’s a mixed picture: The second week of March saw a mere 9 percent increase in crime compared to the same week last year — notable, observers say, because the city has otherwise seen a 20 percent surge this year. But then there’s a recent Norwegian study that suggests recently laid-off workers are 20 percent more likely to commit criminal offenses in the first year they’re jobless. Perhaps more disturbing? Across North America, gun and ammunition sales are through the roof these days as people worry they’ll need to defend themselves. The day U.S. COVID-19 cases broke 1,000, Ammo.com reported a 276 percent spike in sales that lasted throughout the week. “They’re coming apart at the seams, these people,” one New Jersey store owner told the Newark Star-Ledger.