Ex-governors join Gov. Jerry Brown in fighting inmate releases
SACRAMENTO — Gov. Jerry Brown is getting some help from four previous California governors as he fights to block the release of inmates from the state’s crowded prisons.
The governors — Republicans Pete Wilson, George Deukmejian and Arnold Schwarzenegger and Democrat Gray Davis — filed a brief on Monday with the U.S. Supreme Court in hopes of bolstering Brown’s case.
A panel of three federal judges have ordered the state to release more than 9,500 inmates by the end of the year to meet a court-ordered target for reducing prison crowding. Brown wants the U.S. Supreme Court to block the order while justices consider his appeal.
Brown, a Democrat, asked the former governors for their assistance, said Kent Scheidegger, the legal director at the Criminal Justice Legal Foundation and the author of the ex-governors’ brief.
The prison system has been under court oversight because judges determined that overcrowding prevented adequate healthcare for inmates, causing death and unconstitutional conditions behind bars.
Brown and other officials have said the state has made enough improvements and warn that crime will increase if the state is forced to release inmates.
The former governors echoed those concerns.
“Given the irreparable harm of criminal victimization, the likelihood that further releases will cause more victimization, and the dramatic improvements in California prison healthcare since the original trial in this case, no further reductions should be ordered without a full examination of the case,” the brief said.
The prison system is also facing other challenges, including a hunger strike by thousands of inmates and a separate court order to remove inmates from prisons where they face increased risk of valley fever.
ALSO:
Hunger strikers, slightly fewer, continue prison protests
Lawmakers call for investigation of alleged prison sterilizations
Judges refuse to delay order to release 9,600 California inmates
Twitter: @chrismegerian
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.