IF the prosecutor can find any reliable witnesses who were not under the influence at the time. Really, is it good public policy to incarcerate folks at a cost to taxpayers of $100,000 per year plus prosecution costs for accidents?
Wifey B: And I quote myself,
"I wouldn't put him in prison for murder for decades. I'd suspend and ban him from operating boats. We don't gain by spending money on him in prison and other family members may need him, but he'd not be allowed to operate a boat ever again and a car for some period of time."
Now, if he then operated without a license, immediate revocation of his suspended sentence and to jail.
Many of those in prison make no sense, starting with all those arrested for simple drug possession and including those in jail for failure to pay fines.
Fortunately your $100,000 is far above the real cost. Average in 2017 was just over $36,000, but still. I noticed it's right at $100/day. Could we just go Motel 6 and Fast Food instead?
NY costs $69,000 a year and Alabama $15,000. Maybe we should send the New Yorkers to Alabama? (Ok, I really don't mean this as nothing against Alabama but too good to pass it up....so here it come.....That would be double punishment).
There's worse though, NY City Jails, $168,000 a year. I've got an idea. Like the retired lady who decided cruise ships were cheaper and more fun than retirement homes, maybe we put them all on cruise ships.
California had 133,000 prisoners for $8,596,902,049. I've never been great with the comma thing on numbers but that's $8 billion if I'm correct.
Omg we have 2.3 million incarcerated and some wild numbers. 540000 who haven't been convicted but can't afford bail, which the median bail is 10000 for felonies. Trying to think this through. Let's see, you have a warrant for not paying your traffic fines on your $130 ticket. Ok, bail is $5000. Oh you can't pay that? I'll lock you up for six months and spend $18000. But then maybe free room and board is appreciated and better than their life outside. Whoa. 451000 drug related.
Local jails have churning. Only 600,000 a year enter prison but people go to jail 10,600,000 times a year. That's how many processed in and out. Is that like 18 times the number staying? 168,000 people back to prison for technical violations of probation or parole.
22,000 young people incarcerated who haven't committed any crime.
Oh and the cost of the 2.3 million locked up....that's not all of it. Don't forget the cost of the 3.6 million on probation and the 0.9 million on parole for a total of 6.8 million "in the system".
So, even at $36k vs. your $100k, the last thing I want to do is send another non-violent person to prison.