Franklin Zimring

Franklin Zimring Says Prisons Don’t Work

KALW Crosscurrents, May 19, 2010 by David Onek
http://bit.ly/bGFs7I

“The thing that is being missed about the lessons from New York City is that the two largest assumptions that have been driving crime policy in this country are probably the wrong way to go about things. Our theory was that … only incapacitation works. New York has disproved that.”

Franklin Zimring Says Smart Policing, Not Prisons, Helped Reduce Crime in New York

East Bay Express, May 13, 2010 by David Downs
http://bit.ly/9cgZiD

“Their incarceration rate is down 28 percent and their crime is down 80 percent. So we now know that you don’t need mega-imprisonment policy to have substantial decline in crime…. The second article of faith in America is that you can’t get crime control without winning the war on drugs. But when you take a look at New York City’s drug overdose death rate, and it’s down 15 or 20 percent, but their drug killings are down 90 percent. All of a sudden you realize that drug violence and illegal drug use may be two different problems.”

Franklin Zimring Finds Experts Consistently Fail to Forecast Crime Rate

Chicago Tribune, May 2, 2010 by Clarence Page
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/columnists/ct-oped-0502-page-20100502,0,557609,full.column

In his 2007 book about the sudden, unexpected nationwide crime drop in the mid-1990s … Franklin E. Zimring, a University of California at Berkeley law professor, found that experts were consistent in their complete failure to forecast that the crime drop was going to take place and how long it would last. Instead, he found “cascades of good news encourage optimistic assessments” about the crime-fighting abilities of government, adding that “crime increases invite observers to conclude that ‘nothing works.’ “

Franklin Zimring Says African-American on Asian Homicides Rare, But Tensions Real

New America Media, April 29, 2010 by Aaron Glantz
http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=7a54346b5af80c001d6b898dd2598f55

“Oakland’s recent high year for homicide was 2006, with 149 killings. All but six victims were black or Hispanic,” noted Frank Zimring, who directs the Center for Studies of Criminal Justice at UC Berkeley. While the race of every perpetrator is not known, Zimring guesses that there was at most one homicide with a black offender and an Asian victim. “The resentment is probably not rare, but the victimizations are,” he said.

Franklin Zimring Questions Effectiveness of Sex Offender Laws

The New York Times, Bay Area Blog, April 13, 2010 by Gerry Shih
http://bayarea.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/13/after-another-murder-another-proposed-law/

Franklin Zimring, a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley, School of Law, told The New York Times that sex offender laws were sometimes nothing more than a barometer of public opinion. “They’re a plebiscite on sex offenders, and no one likes sex offenders,” Professor Zimring said. “It’s not like they have a lobbying group.”

Franklin Zimring Believes Sex-Offender Laws are Symbolic and Ineffective

-The New York Times, March 6, 2010 by Gerry Shih
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/07/us/07sfoffender.html

Franklin Zimring, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, School of Law, said he believed that the law was never meant to be enforced. “It’s almost completely symbolic,” Professor Zimring said of the original ballot measure, Proposition 83. “As long as the decisive question is sentiments, you don’t have to ask any of the practical questions.”

-The Press-Enterprise, March 7, 2010 by Sarah Burge
http://www.pe.com/localnews/stories/PE_News_Local_W_offender08.4169fea.html

“There’s no way to create a zero-risk universe for this,” said Franklin Zimring, a professor at the UC Berkeley School of Law. “That’s not merely hard, that’s impossible.”

-Los Angeles Times, March 14, 2010 by Cathleen Decker
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-week14-2010mar14,0,5837387,print.story

Franklin Zimring, a UC Berkeley law professor who has studied the measures, said they have largely become “symbolic politics.” Few have bothered to question whether the measures actually promote public safety, he said, because of the stigma of defending sex offenders. “Nobody wants to be photographed in close embrace with sex offenders,” he said. “Unless something is very expensive, it’s not apt to get much political scrutiny.”

Franklin Zimring Puts Homicide Drop in Context

New America Media, January 28, 2010 by Franklin E. Zimring
http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=972db69d1a1e75acf735f4650918ea22

Before the city fathers of San Francisco dance too far out on a limb in claiming credit for good news, the recent experience in Richmond, Calif., should inspire some caution. In 2008, the number of homicides in Richmond dropped substantially—from 47 in 2007 to under 30. This was a very encouraging development in a city of 100,000, where lethal violence is the primary civic problem. But the relief proved temporary, because the homicide toll for 2009 returned to 47.