Guns, Prisons, Crime, and Immigration: Difference between revisions

From ALEC Exposed
Jump to navigation Jump to search
add summaries, move box
m Changed PRW URLs from HTTP to HTTPS
 
(111 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<div id="mainpage"></div>
<!--       GUNS, PRISONS, CRIME, AND IMMIGRATION LAYOUT        -->
<!--
<!--       INTRO PARAGRAPH        -->
------------------------------Criminal "Justice"------------------------------->
<div class="mp-1col">
{| style="border-spacing:8px; margin:-8px -8px;"
{| style="vertical-align:top; background-color:#BDD3F0;color:#ffffff;"
|style="width:100%; border:1px solid #7BA7E1; background:#7BA7E1; vertical-align:top; color:#7BA7E1;"|
! style="padding:2px;" | <h2 style="margin:3px; background:#2966B8; font-size:140%; font-weight:bold; text-align:left; color:#FFFFFF; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">Efforts to Rewrite Americans' Rights; Changes that Imprison More People for Longer and Make More Money</h2>
{| cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5" style="vertical-align:top; background:#7BA7E1; color:#7BA7E1"
! <h2 style="margin:0; background:#2966B8; font-size:172%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #2966B8; text-align:left; color:#FFF; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">ALEC's Efforts to Rewrite Laws about Americans' Rights</h2>
|-
|-
|style="color:#000; padding: 0 0.5em 0 0.5em;"|  
| style="color:#000000; font-size:120%; padding:0 0.75em;" | [[File:forprofitprisons.jpg|100px|left|alt=Guns, Prisons, Crime, and Immigration]]'''This page documents how bills pushed by ALEC corporations result in taxpayers subsidizing the profits of the private prison industry by putting more people in for-profit prisons and keeping them in jail for longer.'''  The bills also would put more guns on streets and interfere with local law enforcement decisions about how best to interact with immigrant communities.
<font size="3">'''The bills on this page represent ALEC corporations' efforts to support the private prison industry by putting more people in jail, to interfere with rehabilitative incareration alternatives, to perpetuate the failed "war on drugs," to prop up the commercial bail-bond industry, to put more guns on streets, and to criminalize immigrants.''' These "model bills" are drafted at American Legislative Exchange Council conventions with input from, and approval by, Big Business, then introduced in state legislatures to erode the democratic power of average Americans. Politicians are elected to represent the people, not corporations; through ALEC, corporations have both a VOICE and a VOTE on specific state laws. Do you? '''</font>
 
|}
'''Through ALEC, corporations have both a VOICE and a VOTE on specific state laws through these model bills. ''Do you?'' '''
|}
|}
<!--
</div>
-------------------------Begin left column------------------------>
{| style="border-spacing:8px; margin:0px -8px;"
|style="width:49%; border:1px solid #c9d7f0; background:#FFFFFF; vertical-align:top; color:#000;"|
{| width="100%" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5" style="vertical-align:top; background:#FFFFFF;"
<!--
-------------------------Featured Work------------------------>
|-
! <h2 style="margin:0; background:#CC0000; font-size:160%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #435c7a; text-align:left; color:#FFF; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">READ the "Model Bills" HERE</h2>
|-
|style="color:#000;"|
<br>
[[Image:Full_Set.png|left|230px]][[media:7G0-9.zip|<big>'''Clicking here will send a zip file of ''all'' bills on this topic.'''</big>]]
<br>
<br>
'''<h2>To read the list of individual bills ''before'' opening them, [[Bills related to the Prison and Bail Industries and Crime|click here]].</h2>'''
<!--
-------------------------Task Force------------------------>
|-
! <h2 style="margin:0; background:#000; font-size:160%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #435c7a; text-align:left; color:#FFF; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">WHO Is Behind ALEC?</h2>
|-
|style="color:#000;"|
[[Image:Top Hat.png|left|90px]]
<big>
'''Corporations and politicians on ALEC's Task Forces'''[http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=ALEC_Task_Forces (details here)] 
 
'''Businesses and legislators''' on ALEC's leadership boards [http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=ALEC_Boards (details here)]


'''Managers, staff, and "experts"''' of ALEC [http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=ALEC_Staff (details here)]</big>
<!--       QUICK REFERENCE        -->
 
<div class="mp-1col">
<!--
{| style="width:100%; text-align:left; background:#ffffff;"
-------------------------Related topics------------------------>
|-
|-
! <h2 style="margin:0; background:#000; font-size:160%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #435c7a; text-align:left; color:#FFF; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">Related ALEC Exposed Articles</h2>
| style="color:#000000; font-size:100%; padding:0 0.75em;" |
|-
[[Image:Bills.jpg|left|50px]]
|style="color:#000;"|  
[[Image:Dollar.png|left|90px]]
<big>'''ALEC funding and spending''' [http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=American_Legislative_Exchange_Council (here)]
'''ALEC connections to David and Charles Koch, the oil billionaires''' [http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=ALEC_and_Koch (here)]


'''Proposals to change the rules for workers, including unions''' [[Worker_Rights|(here)]]
<big>[[Bills related to Guns, Prisons, Crime, and Immigration|You can access these ALEC "model" bills on guns, prisons, crime, and immigration here]].
----
[[Image:Fact Sheet.jpg|left|100px]]


'''Industry-specific agendas, like oil companies [[Big Oil|(here)]] and the health insurance industry''' [[Human Health|(here)]]'''</big>
[[Media:ALEC_on_Guns%2C_Crime%2C_and_Prisons.pdf|Download a one-page fact sheet on ALEC and guns, prisons, crime, and immigration here]].
----
[[Image:Take_Action!.png|left|115px|link=http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/632/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=10002]]


|-
[http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/632/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=10002 Send a letter to ALEC companies asking them to cut ties with ALEC.]</big>
|}
|}
</div>


<!--
<!--       MAIN CONTENT        -->
--------------------------------Begin right column------------------------------->
|style="width:45%; border:1px solid #c9d7f0; background:#FFFFFF; vertical-align:top"|
{| width="100%" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5" style="vertical-align:top; background:#FFFFFF;"


<!--
<!--       WHAT THE BILLS DO        -->
-------------------------How You Can Help------------------------>
<div class="mp-2col-left">
|-
{| style="vertical-align:top; background-color:#FFF;"
! <h2 style="margin:0; background:#000; font-size:160%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #435c7a; text-align:left; color:#FFF; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">How YOU Can Expose ALEC & Share What You Learn</h2>
! style="padding:2px;" | <h2 style="margin:3px; background:#000000; font-size:140%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #000000; text-align:left; color:#ffffff; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">How Are Corporations Interfering With Our Criminal Justice System?</h2>
|-
|-
|style="color:#000;"|
| style="color:#000000; padding:0 0.75em;" |
<big>'''Corporations and their politician allies voted behind closed doors through ALEC to change America's criminal justice system and enrich profits.'''</big><br>
On the surface, many ALEC bills look like basic tough-on-crime legislation, but some corporate leaders of ALEC benefit financially from such legislation -- meaning that what has been sold to the public as good for public safety was often pushed by corporations that profit from such changes in the law, without politicians disclosing their corporate allies' financial interest to the public when such bills, pre-approved by the corporations, were introduced.


[[Image:One.png|left|60px]]
Examples include:  
<big>'''SPREAD THE WORD.''' </big> Share the information and articles on this page through FACEBOOK, EMAIL, AND TWITTER. Concerned groups and individuals in every state need to have this information to start their own investigations of how ALEC corporations and politicians have tried to rewrite state law.
<br>
<br>
[[Image:Two.png|left|60px]] <big>'''EXPOSE ALEC LEGISLATORS.'''</big>  It boasts of 2,000 state legislators, but ALEC's membership list is a secret.  Demand the truth from state ethics officials or use your state’s open records law to find out if  YOUR tax dollars are being used by politicians to pay annual dues to ALEC.  See if your elected representatives are accepting “scholarships” or reimbursement from ALEC's corporate-funded coffers for fancy ALEC conventions and events.
<br>
[[Image:Three.png|left|60px]]<big>'''EXPOSE ALEC'S ROLE IN YOUR STATE HOUSE.'''</big>  Read these corporate-backed "model bills" NOW and start to cross-check them with bills of the same name or similar bills in your state legislature. Ask your local media to report on what you have found or write a letter to the paper to share what you learned.  (The full set of bills is available in the left column.) 
<br>
[[Image:Four.png|left|60px]]<big>'''SHARE YOUR DISCOVERIES.'''</big> Tell us what about what you uncovered!  Tweet what you learn with the hashtag '''#ALECExposed''' or post a comment in the "[[Alec_Exposed:Community_portal|community page]]" of this website or email us a confidential tip via tipline AT sourcewatch.org.  With over 7,000 state legislators in the United States and thousands of bills in each state house every year, it will take a team of people in every state to expose the full array of the ALEC corporate agenda.
<br>
<big>'''Take action today to help your family, friends, and fellow Americans better understand how global corporations are trying to rewrite your rights.'''</big>


|-
'''Bills that prop up the for-profit bail bond industry, a long-time ALEC board member, through:'''
|}
|}


<!--
* [[Media:7A11-Crimes_With_Bail_Restrictions_Act_Exposed.pdf|Expanding the list of offenses]] for which a person must pay a for-profit bail-bondsman for their release. (See also [[Media:7A9-Bailable_Offences_Act_Exposed.pdf|this bill]] and [[Media:7A1-Alternative_Method_of_Court_Appearances_Act_Exposed.pdf|this bill]]).
-------------------------Do You Want to Learn More------------------------>
** [[Media:7A12-Uniform_Bail_Act_Exposed.pdf|Eliminating pre-trial release agencies]] that pursue evidence-based, public-safety oriented methods of release that don't require paying a for-profit business, or [[Media:7A10-Citizens_Right_to_Know_-_Pretrial_Release_Act_Exposed.pdf|imposing new burdens on those agencies]].
{| style="border-spacing:8px; margin:-8px -8px;"
** Offering bail bond companies opportunities to avoid paying debts to states by:
|style="width:100%; border:1px solid #7BA7E1; background:#7BA7E1; vertical-align:top; color:#FFF;"|
*** [[Media:7A4-Bail_Bond_Expiration_Act_Exposed.pdf|Allowing debts to expire]] or
{| cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5" style="vertical-align:top; background:#7BA7E1; color:#FFF"
*** [[Media:7A5-Bail_Forfeiture_Notification_Act_Exposed.pdf|Imposing notification technicalities]] on courts.
! <h2 style="margin:0; background:#2966B8; font-size:160%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #2966B8; text-align:left; color:#FFF; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">Learn MORE about the "Model Bills" that Are Attempting to Rewrite YOUR Rights</h2>
|-
|style="color:#000; padding: 0 0.5em 0 0.5em;"|
<big>'''The Center for Media and Democracy has annotated the "model legislation" politicians and corporations voted on, and we will be adding our analysis to this page and other publications, such as our sister sites, [http://www.PRWatch.org PRWatch] and [http://www.SourceWatch.org SourceWatch].'''  Please bookmark this page and check the boxes below for updates on analysis and information.</big>   
|}
<!--
-------------------------Begin left column------------------------>
{| style="border-spacing:8px; margin:0px -8px;"
|style="width:49%; border:1px solid #c9d7f0; background:#FFFFFF; vertical-align:top; color:#000;"|
{| width="100%" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5" style="vertical-align:top; background:#FFFFFF;"
<!--
-------------------------What the Bills Do------------------------>
|-
! <h2 style="margin:0; background:#000; font-size:160%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #000; text-align:left; color:#FFF; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">How Are Corporations Interfering With Our Criminal Justice System?</h2>
|-
|style="color:#000;"|
[[Image:Scales.png|left|140px]]
<big>'''Corporations and their politician allies VOTED behind closed doors through ALEC to change America's criminal justice system by:</big><br>


* '''Enacting new barriers to community-based corrections''' (7C2, 7C3), which will increase prison populations and the profits of the private prison industry
'''Bills that benefit long-time ALEC members of the global for-profit prison industry,''' like the Corrections Corporation of America, by:


* '''Anti-immigrant legislation''' that requires local law enforcement to enforce complex federal law, encourages racial profiling, and destroys the law enforcment-community relationship
* [[Media:7D6-Minimum-Mandatory_Sentencing_Act_Exposed.pdf|Increasing time served for drug offenses]] through mandatory minimum sentencing,
* [[Media:7C2-Community_Corrections_Performance_Measurement_Act_Exposed.pdf|Creating barriers to alternatives to prison such as community-based corrections programs]], which will increase prison populations (see another example ([[Media:7C3-Recidivism_Reduction_Act_Exposed.pdf|here]]), and
* [[Media:7L0-Habitual_Juvenile_Offender_Act_Exposed.pdf|Treating juveniles like adults]]. See also [[Media:7L1-Juvenile_Identification_Act_Exposed.pdf|here]].
* ''Not in the zip file, but on The Heartland Institute website, is the [http://www.heartland.org/budgetandtax-news.org/article/6263/Private_Correctional_Facilities_Act.html "Private Correctional Facilities Act"] from 1995, which opens a state to for-profit incarceration.''


* '''Overturning common-law rules designed to deter police misconduct''' and ensure arrests and searches are constitutional, including:  
'''Bills that add new penalties for retail theft, which increase prison population and aid ALEC corporations that are retailers, like corporate board member Wal-Mart, such as:'''
** '''reversal of the “Exclusionary Rule”''' for unlawfully obtained evidence (7D1) and
** '''elimination of the “hearsay rule”''' when determining whether probable cause existed (7D2)


* '''Adding new penalties to retail theft (which will benefit Private Sector Board Member Wal-Mart),''' such as:
* [[Media:7B7-Theft_From_Three_Separate_Mercantile_Establishments_Act_Exposed.pdf|Making it a felony to steal from three retail establishments]], regardless of the value of the property stolen,
** '''adding a penalty enhancer for thieves who use the emergency exit''' (7B8), and  
* [[Media:7B8-Theft_Using_Emergency_Exit_to_Avoid_Apprehension_or_Detection_Act_Exposed.pdf|Adding a penalty-enhancer for thieves who use the emergency exit]], and
** '''regardless of the value of the property stolen, making it a felony to steal from three retail establishments''' (7B7)
* [[Media:7B10-Unused_Property_Market_Act_Exposed.pdf|Imposing new regulations on swap meets and flea markets]] that may compete with retail stores.


* '''Imposing new regulations on swap meets and flea markets''' that may compete with retail stores(7B5) 
Other drug use-related bills would [[Media:7F4-Drug-Free_Post-Secondary_Education_Act_Exposed.pdf|require that any college student convicted of a drug crime lose financial aid]], [[Media:7F14-Workplace_Drug_Testing_Act_Exposed.pdf|promote drug testing in American workplaces]], even if the work has nothing to do with public safety, and [[Media:7Q5-Suspension_of_Driving_Privileges_Act_Exposed.pdf|suspend the driver's license]] of anyone convicted of a drug crime.


* '''Perpetuating the war on drugs''' through:
-----
** '''mandatory minimum sentencing''' for drug crimes (7D6)
** '''requiring university students convicted of any drug crime be suspended and lose financial aid''' (7F4),
** '''promoting drug testing in workplaces''' (7F14), and
** '''suspending driver’s licenses for all persons convicted of drug crimes''' (7Q5)


* '''Including victims in the parole decision,''' even though victim anger has little to do with a person’s likelihood of recidivism or rehabilitiation, but will lengthen prison sentences (7D7) (see also Constitutional Amendment 7R1), (sentencing decision 7R3)
'''The bills also include anti-immigrant legislation''' that require local law enforcement to enforce complex federal law, result in racial or ethnic profiling, and destroy the law enforcement-community relationship. (See Arizona's [[Media:7K5-No_Sanctuary_Cities_for_Illegal_Immigrants_Act_Exposed.pdf|SB1070 model here]], as well as [[Media:7K3-Immigration_Law_Enforcement_Act_Exposed.pdf|this bill]], [[Media:7K10-Resolution_to_Enforce_Our_Immigration_Laws_and_Secure_Our_Border_Exposed.pdf|this bill]] and [[Media:7K12-Taxpayer_and_Citizen_Protection_Act_Exposed.pdf|this bill]]).


* '''Imposing unrealistic conditions for parolees or persons on probation,''' setting them up for failure and re-incarceration
-----


* '''Blaming homeowners for the mortgage crisis by creating the crime of “mortgage fraud”''' (7I1)
'''The bills would also overturn long-standing rules designed to protect Americans' constitutional rights,''' including the right to be free from warrantless searches and the right to confront one's accusers, such as legislation to:
* [[Media:7D1-Exclusionary_Rule_Act_Exposed.pdf|Reverse the "Exclusionary Rule"]] for unlawfully obtained evidence and,
* [[Media:7D2-Hearsay_in_Public_Hearings_Act_Exposed.pdf|Eliminate the rule against hearsay]] when determining whether probable cause existed.


* '''Opposing the collection of personal information in pawnbroking''' (7I2)
-----


* '''Supporting the National Rifle Association agenda''' through legislation and resolutions that:
'''Still other bills would aid corporations in other ways,''' like [[Media:7I1-Mortgage_Fraud_Act_Exposed.pdf|bills to punish homeowners]] for the mortgage crisis by creating the crime of "mortgage fraud," that focuses primarily on consumers, but no corresponding new crimes for the Wall Street shell game that sank the U.S. economy.
**'''Puts guns on college campuses''' (7J1)
**'''Supports "concealed carry" gun laws''' through, for example, recognition of concealed carry laws from other states, (with reciprocity 7J4), and (without reciprocity 7J3).
**'''Prohibits local counties or cities from enacting firearm restrictions''' (7J5)
** '''Opposes efforts by law enforcement to use their purchasing power to pursue public safety ends''' by asking gun manufacturers not to market weapons for criminal use (7J7)
** '''Opposes the ability for law enforcement officers to seize guns and ammunition in declared “states of emergency”''' (7J8)
** '''Opposes waiting periods for firearm purchases''' (7J10)
** '''Opposes bans on semi-automatic firearms''' (like the one used in the Arizona shooting that killed 9 people and seriously injured Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords) (7J11)
** '''Puts guns in kid's hands''' (7J9)


* '''Promoting legislation to treat juveniles as adults''' and creating new legislation with new penalties for juvenile offenders (7L0)
-----


* '''Subjecting juveniles to the same lineup requirements as adults''' (7L1)
'''Spotlight on Gun Bills'''<br>
For many years, until this spring, the National Rifle Association (NRA) actually co-chaired the ALEC "Task Force on Public Safety and Elections." (The election bills are discussed in the section of this site titled "Democracy, Voter Rights and Federal Power.") ALEC bills include "model" legislation that advances the constitutionality of an individual's right to bear arms, an argument vindicated by a recent ruling of the U.S. Supreme Court. The legislation also would likely benefit the firearms industry closely connected to the NRA. 


* '''Propping-up the commercial bail-bond industry''' that has a record of corrupting the sentencing process, and puts the decision of whether an accused person goes free in the hands of a profit-oriented business, through legislation that:
Bills or resolutions in this area:
** '''attacks efforts to enact evidence-based alternative pre-trial release programs''' by imposing new reporting requirements on pre-trial release agencies
** '''offers bail bond companies opportunities to avoid paying debts''' to states by:
*** '''allowing debts to expir'''e (7A4) or
*** '''imposing notification technicalities on court'''s (7A5)
** '''expanding the list of offenses for which a person must pay a for-profit bail-bondsman for their release''' (7A11) (7A9) (7A1)


|-
* [[Media:7J11-Resolution_on_Semicopy_Exposed.pdf|Oppose bans on semi-automatic firearms]] like the one used in the shooting in Arizona that killed nine people and seriously injured Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords.
* [[Media:7J10-Resolution_On_Firearms_Purchase_Waiting_Periods_Exposed.pdf|Oppose waiting periods for criminal and mental health background checks for firearm purchases]].
* [[Media:7J3-Concealed_Carry_Outright_Recognition_Act_Exposed.pdf|Support concealed-carry gun laws]] [[Media:7J4-Concealed_Carry_True_Reciprocity_Act_Exposed.pdf|see also here]].
* [[Media:7J7-Defense_of_Free_Market_and_Public_Safety_Resolution_Exposed.pdf|Oppose efforts by law enforcement]] to use their purchasing power get gun manufacturers not to market guns or ammo likely to be used against police, like "cop killer bullets" that pierce armor.
* [[Media:7J5-Consistency_in_Firearms_Regulation_Act_Exposed.pdf|Prohibit local counties or cities]] from enacting firearm restrictions, [[Media:7J8-Emergency_Powers_Firearm_Owner_Protection_Act_Exposed.pdf|or emergency measures that could be abused]].
* [[Media:7J1-Campus_Personal_Protection_Act_Exposed.pdf|Encourage guns on campus]], [[Media:7J9-Resolution_on_Child_Firearms_Safety_Exposed.pdf|and for younger kids]].
<br>
''For a full list of bills from this section, [[Bills_related_to_Guns,_Prisons,_Crime,_and_Immigration|click here]].''
 
'''This information is available for download as a two-page fact sheet [[Media:ALEC_on_Guns%2C_Crime%2C_and_Prisons.pdf|here]].'''
|}
|}
</div>


<!--
<!--       DID YOU KNOW ABOUT THESE BILLS        -->
--------------------------------Begin right column------------------------------->
<div class="mp-2col-right">
|style="width:45%; border:1px solid #c9d7f0; background:#FFFFFF; vertical-align:top"|
{| style="width:100%; vertical-align:top; background-color:#ffffff;"
{| width="100%" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5" style="vertical-align:top; background:#FFFFFF;"
! style="padding:2px;" | <h2 style="margin:3px; background:#000000; font-size:140%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #000000; text-align:left; color:#ffffff; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">ALEC Ratified "Stand Your Ground" Law</h2>
|-
| style="color:#000000; padding:0 0.75em;" | [[Image:Trayvon.martin.jpg|left|200px]]In February 2012, 17-year-old Trayvon Martin was shot and killed by 28-year-old George Zimmerman as the unarmed high school student returned from a 7-11 with an iced tea and bag of Skittles. Police initially failed to arrest Zimmerman because of the state's "Stand Your Ground" law, which goes beyond the traditional right to self defense by establishing a legal presumption of immunity if a killer claims they had a reasonable fear of bodily harm. The law has been described as an invitation to vigilantism and a "license to kill."


<!--
In March 2012, CMD [https://www.prwatch.org/news/2012/03/11366/alec-ratified-nra-conceived-law-may-protect-trayvon-martins-killer reported] that NRA lobbyist Marion Hammer [http://mediamatters.org/blog/201203270005 helped draft] the Florida law in 2005, and [https://www.prwatch.org/files/Retreat_from_NRA's_force_St._Petersburg_Time.DOC  "stared down legislators as they voted"] to pass it. Just a few months later, Hammer [https://www.prwatch.org/files/NRA_2005.png presented the bill] to ALEC's Criminal Justice Task Force (now known as the Public Safety and Elections Task Force), and the NRA [https://www.prwatch.org/files/NRA_2005.png boasted] that "[h]er talk was well-received." The corporations and state legislators on the Task Force -- which was [http://web.archive.org/web/20050810000953/http://www.ajc.com/news/content/metro/0805/08alec.html chaired] by Wal-Mart, the nation's largest retailer of long guns -- voted unanimously to approve the bill as an ALEC "model bill." Since becoming an ALEC model it has become law in dozens of other states, and the number of homicides classified as "justifiable" [http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/stand-your-ground-laws-coincide-with-jump-in-justifiable-homicide-cases/2012/04/07/gIQAS2v51S_story.html has dramatically increased].
-------------------------Did You Know about these Bills------------------------>
----
|-
|-
! <h2 style="margin:0; background:#000; font-size:160%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #7ba06d; text-align:left; color:#FFF; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">Did You Know about ''these'' Bills?</h2>
! style="padding:2px;" | <h2 style="margin:3px; background:#000000; font-size:140%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #000000; text-align:left; color:#ffffff; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">Arizona’s SB 1070 has ALEC Roots</h2>
|-
|-
|style="color:#000;"|
| style="color:#000000; padding:0.75em;" |[[Image:Russell Pearce.jpg|right|100px]][https://www.prwatch.org/news/2011/08/10947/brownskins-and-greenbacks-alec-profit-prison-industry-and-arizona’s-sb-1070 In December 2009], months before the Arizona legislature took up its highly controversial immigration bill (SB 1070), for-profit prison and bail industry lobbyists gathered behind closed doors with state legislators at an ALEC meeting where the "No Sanctuary Cities for Illegal Immigrants Act" was approved as a "model bill" to be introduced in statehouses across the country. The National Rifle Association was then the private sector co-chair of that ALEC task force. After the bill was approved by ALEC corporations and legislators, it was [https://www.prwatch.org/news/2011/11/11120/arizona-senator-recalled-over-alec-immigration-bill introduced in Arizona by Russell Pearce], a longtime ALEC member.
------
<h3>Some of this Corporate Agenda Has Already Become Law</h3>
[[Image:Wisconsin.png|left|90px]] '''When current Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker was a state representative, he was an ALEC member and introduced (several?) bills proposed by ALEC, including "Truth in Sentencing."''' Passed in Wisconsin in 1997, the bill requires inmates serve their full sentence without options for parole or supervised release.  


At the time, the private sector members of the ALEC Task Force included for-profit prison operator Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), which before the meeting had identified immigrant detention as a profit center important for its future growth, stating it anticipated receiving "a significant portion of our revenues" from detaining immigrants. Around half of all immigrant detention facilities are operated by for-profit corporations. After the Arizona bill was introduced, 30 of the bill's 36 co-sponsors promptly received campaign contributions from donors in the for-profit prison industry.


The program has inflated prison populations and greatly increased the amount of taxpayer dollars spent on prisons (in Wisconsin, to [http://www3.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=277059 an estimated $1.8 billion through 2025]). All of which increases profits for private prison companies like the [http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Corrections_Corporation_of_America Corrections Corporation of America], a member of the ALEC Private Sector board.
[https://www.prwatch.org/news/2011/11/11120/arizona-senator-recalled-over-alec-immigration-bill Russell Pearce lost his seat] in a recall election November 8, 2011. The vote was widely seen as a referendum on the anti-immigration legislation. In June 2012, the [https://www.prwatch.org/news/2012/06/11607/us-supreme-court-strikes-down-parts-alec-immigration-law U.S. Supreme Court] struck down most of the  provisions of the Arizona bill. The Court held that striking down the law's controversial "papers please" provision would be premature, but narrowed the provision's application and made clear that it could be challenged at a future date. 
----
|-
! style="padding:2px;" | <h2 style="margin:3px; background:#000000; font-size:140%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #000000; text-align:left; color:#ffffff; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">More Helpful Resources</h2>
|-
|  style="color:#000000; padding:0.75em;" |<big>Additional resources on ALEC's corporate agenda:</big>


* [http://www.justicepolicy.org/research/4388 For Better or For Profit: How the Bail Bonding Industry Stands in the Way of Fair and Effective Pretrial Justice], ''Justice Policy Institute'' (2012)
* [http://www.cjcj.org/files/The_American_Legislative_Exchange_Council.pdf ALEC Report], '''Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice''' (2011)
* [http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=130833741 Prison  Economics Help Drive Ariz. Immigration Law], '''NPR''' (2010)
* [https://www.prwatch.org/news/2011/07/10887/alec-funding ALEC Funding], '''PRWatch''' (2011)
* [https://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=American_Legislative_Exchange_Council  American Legislative Exchange Council] and other related articles, '''SourceWatch''' (2011)
* [http://www.justice.org/cps/rde/xbcr/justice/ALEC_Report.pdf  Ghostwriting the Law for Corporate America], '''American Association for  Justice''' (2010)
* [http://www.progressivestates.org/content/57/governing-the-nation-from-the-statehouses  Governing the Nation from the Statehouses], '''Progressive States  Network''' (2006)
* [http://www.commoncause.org/atf/cf/%7BFB3C17E2-CDD1-4DF6-92BE-BD4429893665%7D/WOLVESREPORT.PDF  Wolves in Sheep's Clothing], '''Common Cause''' (2006)
* [http://www.pfaw.org/rww-in-focus/alec-the-voice-of-corporate-special-interests-state-legislatures  ALEC: The Voice of Corporate Special Interests In State Legislatures], '''People for the American Way''' (2011)
* [http://www.commonwealinstitute.org/cw/files/AttackTrialLawyersTortLaw.pdf  The Attack on Trial Lawyers and Tort Law], '''Commonwealth Institute'''  (2003)
* [http://motherjones.com/politics/2002/09/ghostwriting-law Ghostwriting the Law], ''' ''Mother Jones'' '''(2002)


A former head of Wisconsin's prison system (and current University of Wisconsin Law Professor) Walter Dickey told American Radio Works it is "shocking" that lawmakers would write sentencing policy with help from ALEC, a group that gets funding from, and supposedly "expertise" from a private prison corporation.
----
 
|-
 
! style="padding:2px;" | <h2 style="margin:3px; background:#000000; font-size:140%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #000000; text-align:left; color:#ffffff; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">READ the "Model Bills" HERE</h2>
"I don't know that they know anything about sentencing," he said. "They know how to build prisons, presumably, since that's the business they're in. They don't know anything about probation and parole. They don't know about the development of alternatives. They don't know about how public safety might be created and defended in communities in this state and other states."
|-
|  style="color:#000000; padding:0.75em;"|[[Image:Point.png|left|70px]][[media:Guns,_Prisons,_Crime_and_Immigration.zip|<big>Click  here for a zip file of '''Guns, Prisons, Crime, and Immigration''' bills</big>]]
<br>
[[Image:Full list.png|left|70px]]<big>For  a full list of individual bills from this section, [[Bills related to  Guns, Prisons, Crime, and Immigration|click here]]</big>
<br>
<br>
----


<big>''For  descriptions of some of these bills, [[#How Are Corporations Interfering With Our Criminal Justice System?|click here]].''</big>
|}
</div>


The Wisconsin state legislature apparently recognized the folly of Truth in Sentencing and rolled-back the law between 2001 and 2009. '''When Scott Walker became governor, he reversed this progress and requested legislation restoring the ALEC corporation-supported Truth in Sentencing, despite the costs to taxpayers and despite claiming Wisconsin was "broke."''' 
<!--       LEARN MORE        -->
<div class="mp-1col">
{{Learn More}}
</div>


<!--        THREE COLUMN TABLE        -->
<div class="mp-3col-left">
{{Behind ALEC 3}}
</div>


To learn more about this story, [http://americanradioworks.publicradio.org/features/corrections/laws1.html click here] or [http://www3.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=277059 here]. (Have any of these bills been introduced or enacted in YOUR state?  If so, please add that information to the ALEC Exposed page on your state by searching for your state's name in the search engine at the top of this page.)   
<div class="mp-3col-center">
{{Topics 2}}
----
</div>


|-
<div class="mp-3col-right">
! <h2 style="margin:0; background:#000; font-size:160%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #7ba06d; text-align:left; color:#FFF; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">Other Helpful Resources</h2>
{| style="vertical-align:top; background-color:#ffffff;"
|-
! style="width:33%; padding:2px; vertical-align:top;" | <h2 style="margin:3px; background:#000000; font-size:140%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #000000; text-align:left; color:#ffffff; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">Join the Conversation!</h2>
|style="color:#000;"|
{{#widget:Twitter|user=alecexposed|id=364770906331033603}}
[[Image:Allies.png|left|140px]]
<big>'''Here are links to reports by reporters and advocates that have been challenging the ALEC corporate agenda:'''</big> <small>''(CMD is not affiliated with these other organizations.  If you would like to be listed as a resource, please contact us.)''</small>
<br>
*[http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=American_Legislative_Exchange_Council The American Legislative Exchange Council], on '''the Center for Media and Democracy's SourceWatch.org''' (wiki) and [http://www.prwatch.org/news/2011/03/10146/cmd-special-report-who-league-american-voters-first-series-squawkers-walker A CMD Special Report: Who Is the League of American Voters?], by '''the Center for Media and Democracy's PRWatch.org''' (March 2011) (PLACEHOLDER)
*[http://www.justice.org/cps/rde/xbcr/justice/ALEC_Report.pdf Ghostwriting the Law for Corporate America], by '''the American Association for Justice''' (May 2010)
*[http://www.alecwatch.org/report.html Corporate America's Trojan Horse in the States: The Untold Story Behind the American Legislative Exchange Council], by '''the Defenders of Wildlife and the Natural Resources Defense Council''' (March 2002) 
*[http://www.pfaw.org/rww-in-focus/alec-the-voice-of-corporate-special-interests-state-legislatures ALEC: The Voice of Corporate Special Interests In State Legislatures], by '''People for the American Way''' (May 2011)
*[http://www.thenation.com/blog/159521/wisconsins-cronon-affair-power-simple-fact Wisconsin's Cronon Affair: The Power of a Simple Fact], by '''The Nation''' (March 2011)
*[http://www.commoncause.org/site/pp.asp?c=dkLNK1MQIwG&b=1499059#Groups Wolves in Sheep's Clothing], by '''Common Cause''' (August 2006)
*[http://campusprogress.org/articles/conservative_corporate_advocacy_group_alec_behind_voter_disenfranchise/ Conservative Corporate Advocacy Group ALEC Behind Voter Disenfranchisement Efforts]' by '''the Center for American Progress and Campus Progress''' (March 2011)
|-
|}
|}
|}
</div>


<!--
<!--       CONTACT INFO        -->
------------------------------Contact Information------------------------------>
<div class="mp-1col-cmd">
{| style="border-spacing:8px; margin:0px -8px;"
{{CMD Project}}
|style="width:49%; border:1px solid #aaa; background:#000; vertical-align:top; color:#FFF;"|
</div>
{| width="100%" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5" style="vertical-align:top; background:#000;"
|-
|style="color:#FFF; padding: 0 0.5em 0 0.5em;"|
<big>ALEC Exposed is a project of the Center for Media and Democracy (CMD).  CMD does NOT accept donations from for-profit corporations or government agencies.  More information about CMD is available [http://www.prwatch.org here].  You can reach the publisher of ALEC Exposed, CMD's Executive Director, Lisa Graves, via editor AT alecexposed.org.</big>  
|}
|}
{{browsebar}}
{{browsebar}}
__NOTOC__  __NOEDITSECTION__
__NOTOC__  __NOEDITSECTION__

Latest revision as of 17:34, 13 October 2017

Efforts to Rewrite Americans' Rights; Changes that Imprison More People for Longer and Make More Money

Guns, Prisons, Crime, and Immigration
This page documents how bills pushed by ALEC corporations result in taxpayers subsidizing the profits of the private prison industry by putting more people in for-profit prisons and keeping them in jail for longer. The bills also would put more guns on streets and interfere with local law enforcement decisions about how best to interact with immigrant communities.

Through ALEC, corporations have both a VOICE and a VOTE on specific state laws through these model bills. Do you?


How Are Corporations Interfering With Our Criminal Justice System?

Corporations and their politician allies voted behind closed doors through ALEC to change America's criminal justice system and enrich profits.
On the surface, many ALEC bills look like basic tough-on-crime legislation, but some corporate leaders of ALEC benefit financially from such legislation -- meaning that what has been sold to the public as good for public safety was often pushed by corporations that profit from such changes in the law, without politicians disclosing their corporate allies' financial interest to the public when such bills, pre-approved by the corporations, were introduced.

Examples include:

Bills that prop up the for-profit bail bond industry, a long-time ALEC board member, through:

Bills that benefit long-time ALEC members of the global for-profit prison industry, like the Corrections Corporation of America, by:

Bills that add new penalties for retail theft, which increase prison population and aid ALEC corporations that are retailers, like corporate board member Wal-Mart, such as:

Other drug use-related bills would require that any college student convicted of a drug crime lose financial aid, promote drug testing in American workplaces, even if the work has nothing to do with public safety, and suspend the driver's license of anyone convicted of a drug crime.


The bills also include anti-immigrant legislation that require local law enforcement to enforce complex federal law, result in racial or ethnic profiling, and destroy the law enforcement-community relationship. (See Arizona's SB1070 model here, as well as this bill, this bill and this bill).


The bills would also overturn long-standing rules designed to protect Americans' constitutional rights, including the right to be free from warrantless searches and the right to confront one's accusers, such as legislation to:


Still other bills would aid corporations in other ways, like bills to punish homeowners for the mortgage crisis by creating the crime of "mortgage fraud," that focuses primarily on consumers, but no corresponding new crimes for the Wall Street shell game that sank the U.S. economy.


Spotlight on Gun Bills
For many years, until this spring, the National Rifle Association (NRA) actually co-chaired the ALEC "Task Force on Public Safety and Elections." (The election bills are discussed in the section of this site titled "Democracy, Voter Rights and Federal Power.") ALEC bills include "model" legislation that advances the constitutionality of an individual's right to bear arms, an argument vindicated by a recent ruling of the U.S. Supreme Court. The legislation also would likely benefit the firearms industry closely connected to the NRA.

Bills or resolutions in this area:


For a full list of bills from this section, click here.

This information is available for download as a two-page fact sheet here.

ALEC Ratified "Stand Your Ground" Law

In February 2012, 17-year-old Trayvon Martin was shot and killed by 28-year-old George Zimmerman as the unarmed high school student returned from a 7-11 with an iced tea and bag of Skittles. Police initially failed to arrest Zimmerman because of the state's "Stand Your Ground" law, which goes beyond the traditional right to self defense by establishing a legal presumption of immunity if a killer claims they had a reasonable fear of bodily harm. The law has been described as an invitation to vigilantism and a "license to kill."

In March 2012, CMD reported that NRA lobbyist Marion Hammer helped draft the Florida law in 2005, and "stared down legislators as they voted" to pass it. Just a few months later, Hammer presented the bill to ALEC's Criminal Justice Task Force (now known as the Public Safety and Elections Task Force), and the NRA boasted that "[h]er talk was well-received." The corporations and state legislators on the Task Force -- which was chaired by Wal-Mart, the nation's largest retailer of long guns -- voted unanimously to approve the bill as an ALEC "model bill." Since becoming an ALEC model it has become law in dozens of other states, and the number of homicides classified as "justifiable" has dramatically increased.


Arizona’s SB 1070 has ALEC Roots

In December 2009, months before the Arizona legislature took up its highly controversial immigration bill (SB 1070), for-profit prison and bail industry lobbyists gathered behind closed doors with state legislators at an ALEC meeting where the "No Sanctuary Cities for Illegal Immigrants Act" was approved as a "model bill" to be introduced in statehouses across the country. The National Rifle Association was then the private sector co-chair of that ALEC task force. After the bill was approved by ALEC corporations and legislators, it was introduced in Arizona by Russell Pearce, a longtime ALEC member.

At the time, the private sector members of the ALEC Task Force included for-profit prison operator Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), which before the meeting had identified immigrant detention as a profit center important for its future growth, stating it anticipated receiving "a significant portion of our revenues" from detaining immigrants. Around half of all immigrant detention facilities are operated by for-profit corporations. After the Arizona bill was introduced, 30 of the bill's 36 co-sponsors promptly received campaign contributions from donors in the for-profit prison industry.

Russell Pearce lost his seat in a recall election November 8, 2011. The vote was widely seen as a referendum on the anti-immigration legislation. In June 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down most of the provisions of the Arizona bill. The Court held that striking down the law's controversial "papers please" provision would be premature, but narrowed the provision's application and made clear that it could be challenged at a future date.


More Helpful Resources

Additional resources on ALEC's corporate agenda:

READ the "Model Bills" HERE

Click here for a zip file of Guns, Prisons, Crime, and Immigration bills


For a full list of individual bills from this section, click here




For descriptions of some of these bills, click here.

Learn MORE about the "Model Bills" ALEC Corporations Are Backing to Rewrite YOUR Rights

The Center for Media and Democracy analyzed the bills ALEC politicians and corporations voted for. More analysis is available below and also at ALEC Exposed's sister sites, PRWatch and SourceWatch.

Join the Conversation!

ALEC Exposed is a project of the Center for Media and Democracy (CMD). CMD does NOT accept donations from for-profit corporations or government agencies. More information about CMD is available here. You can reach CMD's Executive Director, Arn Pearson, via editor AT ALECexposed.org. Privacy policy: Other than material you post to this wiki in your name, our privacy policy is that we will not disclose private personally identifiable information or data about you, such as your name, email address, or other information, unless required by law. On copyright: ALEC Exposed considers contributions to this wiki to be released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License or in accordance with law. Information on how to provide us with notice regarding copyright is available at this link. Notices regarding copyright or other matters should be sent to our designated agent, Arn Pearson, via email (editor AT ALECexposed.org).