Barack Obama visits federal prison, calls for reduced sentences
Obama commuted sentences of 46 non-violent drug offenders earlier this week
Barack Obama got a first-hand look at the nation's criminal justice system Thursday, becoming the first sitting U.S. president to set foot inside a federal prison and meet with incarcerated men there.
Obama's visit to the El Reno Federal Correctional Institution, a medium-security prison for male offenders in the state of Oklahoma, was part of his push for an alternative to the continued lengthy incarceration of people convicted of crimes he believes did not fit the punishment. Obama has called for shortening the prison sentences of non-violent drug offenders as well as for advocating the reduction, or outright elimination, of severe mandatory minimum sentences.
In a recent speech Obama said that overly harsh prison sentences, particularly for non-violent drug crimes, are to blame for doubling the prison population in the past two decades. Half a million people were behind bars in 1980, a figure that has since quadrupled to its current total of more than 2.2 million inmates, the highest rate of incarceration in the world.
After peering into a sterile prison cell at El Reno, Obama said the nation needs to reconsider the way crime is controlled and prisoners are rehabilitated.
Kinship with young inmates
Obama, who has vowed to make criminal justice reform a centrepiece of his closing months in office, said he also felt a kinship with some of the young inmates.
"When they describe their youth and their childhood, these are young people who made mistakes that aren't that different than the mistakes I made," Obama said.
The U.S. president said there must be a distinction between young people "doing stupid things" and violent criminals. Young people who make mistakes, he said, could be thriving if they had access to resources and support structures "that would allow them to survive those mistakes."
Obama has also called for restoring voting rights to felons who have served their sentences, and said employers should "ban the box" that asks job applicants about their criminal histories.
The White House said Obama was the first sitting president to visit a federal prison. The presidential motorcade rolled past fences topped with multiple layers of razor wire as it entered the sprawling prison complex.
After his meeting with inmates, Obama walked past rows of empty cells secured by large grey doors. Prison officials opened cell no. 123 for the president, who gazed at its sparse trappings: a bunk bed and third bed along the wall, a toilet and sink, along with a small bookcase and three lockers.
"Three full-grown men in a 9-by-10 cell," he said.
Obama has expressed hope that Congress will send him legislation to address the issue before he leaves office in 18 months, given the level of interest in the issue among Republican lawmakers and presidential candidates.
Obama has said that taxpayers are the ones left to pay the $80 billion US annual cost of locking up people who otherwise could be in rehabilitative programs for less than the cost of incarceration. Or they could be workers paying taxes, or be more involved in their children's lives, or be role models and leaders in their communities.
Presidential security was no small part of Thursday's intriguing Obama outing. White House press secretary Josh Earnest said "unique steps" were to be taken to protect Obama during the visit. He did not elaborate.