Salon.com

January 12, 2001

Hardest hit by the prison craze

Oklahoma executes black woman Wanda Jean Allen at a time
when black women have become the new menace to society.

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson

The execution Thursday night of Wanda Jean Allen for the
murder of her lesbian lover in Oklahoma made news mostly
because Allen was black and female, and Jesse Jackson got
himself arrested in a protest outside the prison where she
was scheduled to be put to death. But what has gotten almost
no media attention is the stunning increase in the number of
black women behind bars.

In its latest report on imprisonment in America, the
Sentencing Project, a Washington public advocacy group,
reports that the number of women locked up in America has
skyrocketed during the past decade. At the end of 1999,
nearly 100,000 women were incarcerated in federal and state
prisons.

Black women have been the hardest hit by the incarceration
craze. More are now behind bars than at any time in American
history. They fill jails and prisons in greater percentages
than black men and are seven times more likely to be
imprisoned than white women. For the first time in American
history, black women in California and several other states
are being imprisoned at nearly the same rate as white men.

Black women have almost single-handedly expanded the
prison-industrial complex. From 1930 to 1950 five women's
prisons were built nationally. During the 1980s and 1990s,
34 more were constructed. Even this hasn't kept pace with
the swelling number of women prisoners. Women's prisons are
understaffed and overcrowded, lack recreation facilities,
serve poor-quality food and suffer chronic shortages of
family planning counselors and services, OB-GYN specialists,
drug treatment and child care facilities, and transportation
funds for family visits.

The reasons for the sharp escalation in the number of black
women behind bars are not hard to find. One out of three
crimes committed by women are drug-related. Many state and
federal sentencing laws mandate minimum sentences for all
drug offenders. This virtually eliminates the option of
referring nonviolent first-time offenders to increasingly
scarce, financially strapped drug treatment, counseling and
education programs. Stiffer punishment for black cocaine
users than white users also ensures that more black women
land in prison.

Also, more than one out of three black women have incomes
below the poverty level. One out of seven is unemployed. One
out of two is a single parent. One out of three is employed
in a low-wage, semi- or unskilled service job. One out of
three has not completed high school.

Yet many still believe that mostly men, especially black
men, are locked up. The media continually reminds the public
that one out of three young black men is in prison, on
probation or parole. Black males make up half the prison
population in America. I counted dozens of crime stories in
major newspapers in 1999 on the plight of young black males
in or facing prison. During the same period, there were
three articles on women in prison and none specifically on
black women in prison.

But even more insidious, black women are saddled with a load
of these racial and gender myths:

Violence-prone: A 10-year study by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention in 1999 found that homicide was the
top killer of black women. More than half of them were
murdered by friends or family members. In most cases their
assailants were males. Dope dealers: Many black women become
involved with drugs out of misguided love and loyalty to a
husband, boyfriend or lover. Some commit petty crimes or
trade sexual favors to support their or their men's habits.
"Gangstas" and charity cases: Black women are frequently
stereotyped as sexually loose, conniving, untrustworthy
"welfare queens." Many of the mostly middle-class judges and
jurors believe that black women offenders are menaces to
society too.

The quantum leap in black women behind bars has had itsgreatest impact on black 
children. More than 80 percent of
women prisoners have children. The children are frequently
denied visits because the mothers are deemed "unfit."

Some criminal justice experts and family rights advocates
contend that the tragedy of incarceration and family
breakups has been worsened by state and federal parental
rights termination laws. The federal Adoption and Safe
Families Act (ASFA) gives states the authority to terminate
parental rights and put a child up for adoption if a child
has been in foster care for 15 out of the past 22 months. If
the child is younger than 3 years, states can begin
termination proceedings in six months. Half of the states
now have laws that cite incarceration as a factor to permit
termination proceedings.

The states have not been reluctant to use these laws. The
number of parent termination cases has sharply increased
since 1996. While much of the public still supports capital
punishment and tough crime measures, few legislators are
willing to stick out their necks and advocate increased
funding for job training, drug treatment, education, child
care and health and parenting skills programs.

None of these measures might have saved Wanda Jean Allen
from a date with the executioner, but it could've saved
countless other black women from winding up in a prison
cell.

Copyright (c) 2001 Pacific News Service.

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