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Former Gov. George Deukmejian, who presided over a dramatic
expansion of the state's prison system in the 1980s, will oversee a panel
on prison reform, the Schwarzenegger administration said Friday.
The panel will cull the best recommendations from existing prison reviews
and report to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger every 30 days, officials said.
The commission will have two months to advise the GOP governor on whether
any of the state's aging prisons should be closed and will issue a final
report with other short-and long-term recommendations in June. Officials
said the panel would examine everything from staff training and ethics
to cost-saving measures.
Schwarzenegger said last month that he would create the review team in
response to a host of recent problems. Among them are reports of rampant
violence at juvenile prisons, a "code of silence" that discourages
prison employees from reporting wrongdoing, and the overspending of the
$5.6 billion corrections budget by hundreds of millions of dollars.
Deukmejian, who is retired from legal practice and lives in Long Beach,
stayed away from discussing specific remedies Friday. But he said he believed
some actions could come quickly.
"Those agencies have been troubled now for some time, and there's
been a lot of criticism of them ... so we're going to take a look at the
organizational issues and hope to make some positive recommendations,"
he said in an interview.
Also appointed to the panel Friday was Joseph Gunn, who co-chaired a commission
that oversaw reforms of the Los Angeles Police Department's troubled Rampart
Division. Gunn will serve as executive director.
Robin Dezember, who was deputy director of the Department of Corrections
under Deukmejian, will serve as a consultant. George Camp, a Connecticut-based
expert on prison crowding, gangs and riots, will also advise.
As governor from 1983 to 1991, Deukmejian ran the state when rising crime
and tougher sentencing laws boosted the prison population from about 35,000
to roughly 93,000.
The inmate growth spurt exacerbated prison overcrowding in those years
and forced Deukmejian and legislative budget makers to deal with cost
overruns in both operations and construction programs. He oversaw a construction
boom that increased the number of state prisons from 12 to 33.
Today, there are about 160,000 inmates in state prisons.
"As a result of the changes in the laws and the expansion of the
system, the state's been able to remove all those criminals from the communities,"
Deukmejian said Friday. "When I was governor, we didn't have the
kinds of issues that have risen to the surface here in the last few years,
but hopefully we can correct the current problems and again restore some
public confidence."
Deukmejian said potential prison closings would be on the list of issues
for review.
"During the time that I was there, we had a growing amount of overcrowding,
and I think that's probably still the case," he said. "As of
today, we'll have to look at it and see whether or not there can and should
be any consolidation."
Some groups that have called for shuttering prisons and reforming tough
sentencing laws were critical of Deukmejian's appointment Friday.
But state Sen. Gloria Romero, D-Los Angeles, who is co-chairing a series
of hearings on problems in the prison system, said she welcomed the former
governor's input.
"As a figure, he's very symbolic in that he is tough on crime, but
he's also fiscally very responsible," she said. "I've always
said we can be tough on crime but we can be smart on crime, so it's an
interesting blend."
Romero also praised Gunn, the panel's director, for his work with the
Los Angeles Police Department.
"Mr. Gunn will bring expertise in terms of his knowledge of officer
conduct, corruption, and the code of silence, and the need to fundamentally
address the culture," she said.
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