The Endless Battle with Prison Gangs

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The Endless Battle with Prison Gangs

As the years pass, the rate of gang affiliated crimes in the Unites States has progressed extensively, accumulating more inmates into our major prisons doubling the maximum occupancy that the jails can hold. In the U.S there are currently 33,000 active violent street, motorcycle, and prison gangs with a recorded 1.4 million members combined. The registered number of police officers is a mere 683,396; which is not even half of our countries gang population. Incredibly enough, even with their small numbers these officers do the impossible to control, learn, and manipulate the ways of the inmates; taking all of the precautions necessary to stop and protect the normal citizens on the streets and the violent killing in the prisons. Yet these inmates have proved to the Prison System that they are far more intelligent than they were perceived by constructing deviant strategies to create weapons, smuggle drugs, and continue communication with their alliances in and out of the prisons. Prisons have never been considered a safe establishment for a person to go to, but gang members have made the major prisons in the country a goal to be reached.

In the United States, all of the penitentiaries are made to hold a maximum of 5000 in occupancy, but with more 600,000 prisoners in our jail system today our prisons have double the number of inmates than recommended to hold. Prison gangs such as the infamous Mexican Mafia, Nuestra Familia, Aryan Brotherhood, Black Guerilla Family, and the Nazi Low Riders are mainly at fault for changing the perspective on how street gangs and other criminals should see the prison system. In major institutions such as Pelican Bay Prison, inmates see it as a privilege to go to...

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...er time there might just be a better looking outcome than how our prison system is looking now.

References

Koffman, S., Ray, A., Berg, S., Covington, L., Albarran, N. M., & Vasquez, M. (2009). Impact of a Comprehensive Whole Child Intervention and Prevention Program among Youths at Risk of Gang Involvement and Other Forms of Delinquency. Children & Schools, 31(4), 239-245.

Frieden, T. (Oct. 2011). Gang membership spikes. CNN Justice Report. Retrieved from http://www.cnn.com/2011/10/21/justice/gang-membership-increase/

Howell, J. C. (2013). GREAT Results. Criminology & Public Policy, 12(3), 413-420. doi:10.1111/1745-9133.12051

Konda, S., Tiesman, H., Reichard, A., & Hartley, D. (2013). U.S. Correctional Officers Killed or Injured on the Job. Corrections Today, 75(5), 122-125.

Valdez, A. J. (2009). Prison Gangs 101. Corrections Today, 71(1), 40-43.

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