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COMMITTEE ON THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

THOMAS F. EAGLETON, Missouri, Chairman

CHARLES MCC. MATHIAS, JR., Maryland
LOWELL P. WEICKER, JR., Connecticut
JAMES L. BUCKLEY, New York

DANIEL K. INOUYE, Hawaii
ADLAI E. STEVENSON III, Illinois
JOHN V. TUNNEY, California

ROBERT HARRIS, Staff Director and Counsel

GENE E. GODLEY, General Counsel
CAROLYN W. JOHNSON, Minority Staff Director

SUBCOMMITTEE ON BUSINESS, COMMERCE, AND JUDICIARY
ADLAI E. STEVENSON III, Illinois, Chairman

JOHN V. TUNNEY, California

CHARLES MCC. MATHIAS, JR., Maryland

(II)

CONTENTS

WITNESSES

Avery, Allen, associate director, Community Service..

Ewing, Blair G., director, Office of Criminal Justice Plans and Analysis,
Executive Office of the Mayor.---.

Page

71

165

200

Ferrell, H. Albion, vice chairman, Board of Parole..

Greene, Chief Judge Harold, Superior Court of the District of Columbia
Gregory, Frank T., superintendent, Correction Industries..
Hardy, Kenneth L., director, District of Columbia Department of Cor-

196

21

rections_

Miller, Herbert J., past president, District of Columbia Bar Association,

and former chairman, President's Commission on Crime...

Montilla, M. Robert, deputy director, District of Columbia Department

of Corrections..

Moore, Luke C., chief, Superior Court Division, U.S. Attorney's Office...
Moore, Warren H., associate director for program development, District
of Columbia Department of Corrections--

11

189

54

Trebach, Dr. Arnold S., senior consultant, Criminal Justice Planning and
Development__.

25

MATERIAL SUBMITTED

"A Summary of Completed Research: 1967-1970," report, Office of Plan-
ning and Research, District of Columbia Department of Corrections___
Adams, Dr. Stuart, associate director for planning and research, District
of Columbia Department of Corrections, prepared statement:
Comparisons of cost effectiveness of prisons, halfway houses, and
probation___

Research and evaluation..

79

186

162

Boone, John O., superintendent of adult services, District of Columbia
Department of Corrections, prepared statement..

160

Ewing, Blair G., director, Office of Criminal Justice Plans and Analaysis,
Executive Office of the Mayor, prepared statement..

165

Hardy, Kenneth L., director, District of Columbia Department of Correc-
tions, prepared statement..

75

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APPENDIXES

Appendix A.-Response from the Department of Corrections to the Senate
District Committee ou Implementation of the Recommendations of the
President's Commission on Crime, February 12, 1969.

Appendix B.-Report and Recommendations for Juvenile and Adult
Detention and Correctional Institutions in the District of Columbia,
December 1970.-

Appendix C.-Study by the American Correctional Association of the
Organization and Effectiveness of the Correctional Agencies, June 1966-
Appendix D.-Staff paper of the Office of Criminal Justice Plans and
Analysis on Commission approaches to law enforcement and criminal
justice reform in the District of Columbia, July 1971..

Appendix E.-The Cost of Correcting Youthful Offenders, District of
Columbia Department of Corrections, Research Report No. 6, Sep-
tember 1968__

Page

207

229

327

433

467

COURT REFORM ACT IMPACT ON

CORRECTIONAL SYSTEM

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 1971

U.S. SENATE,

SUBCOMMITTEE ON BUSINESS, COMMERCE, AND JUDICIARY,
OF THE COMMITTEE ON THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA,
Washington, D.C.

The committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10 a.m., in room 6226, New Senate Office Building, Senator Adlai E. Stevenson III, presiding.

Present: Senators Stevenson and Mathias.

Also present: Gene E. Godley, general counsel; Robert B. Washington, counsel; and Clarence V. McKee, Jr., minority staff member. Senator STEVENSON. This morning the Subcommittee on Business, Commerce, and Judiciary of the Senate District Committee opens oversight hearings on the Court Reform and Criminal Procedure Act of 1970 and its impact on the correctional system of the District of Columbia. These hearings are a continuation of this committee's well-documented concern over the administration of criminal justice in the District of Columbia and its contribution to the improvement of that system.

On July 16, 1965, President Johnson appointed a Commission on Crime in the District of Columbia to study crime prevention and control in the District of Columbia at a time when there was alarming concern over the incidence of crime in the District. The full report of this Commission was released on January 1, 1967, and was a comprehensive factfinding study with some 262 recommendations.

Two years later, in February of 1969, the then chairman of this committee, Senator Tydings, wrote to each agency and organization to which the Crime Commission recommendations were directed requesting a status report on the implementation of the recommendations. The response to these requests was published by the Senate District Committee and extensive hearings were begun on crime in the National Capital.

These hearings eventually became 12 volumes and formed the basis for several legislative proposals, including the Court Reform and Criminal Procedure Act of 1970 which concerns us today. During the evolution of these hearings, an advisory panel against armed violence was appointed by the Senate District Committee on September 23, 1969, which reported to the chairman of the

committee on December 3, 1969, with recommended solutions to the armed violence crisis in the National Capital.

Based on all of these studies and hearings, the Court Reform and Criminal Procedure Act evolved and after lengthy consideration was enacted and signed into law on July 29, 1970. Because of the comprehensive nature of this act, its impact on the criminal justice system is destined to be vast and vigilence must be maintained to insure that the benefits of the act are not obscured by unforeseen problems that might develop.

It is in this nature of oversight that this committee has decided to look into the District of Columbia corrections system to evaluate the results of the Court Reform Act. Specifically, we have been alerted to increased population trends in correctional institutions as a result of the act. Our attention will therefore be focused on the changing nature of the criminal justice system in the District of Columbia since the President's Commission on Crime report and the subsequent effect of the implementation of many of those recommendations, including provisions of the Court Reform Act.

These hearings will continue tomorrow. I expect to have at least one additional hearing after tomorrow. The record will remain open for any person wishing to contribute comments and for any of you who are present today and would like to make additional statements to the committee.

Our first witness this morning is Mr. Herbert J. Miller, the former chairman, President's Commission on Crime, and past president of the District of Columbia Bar Association. Good morning, Mr. Miller.

STATEMENT OF HERBERT J. MILLER, PAST PRESIDENT, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA BAR ASSOCIATION, AND FORMER CHAIRMAN, PRESIDENT'S COMMISSION ON CRIME

Mr. MILLER. Good morning, Senator.

Senator STEVENSON. Do you have a statement you would like to place in the record?

Mr. MILLER. If the committee please, I do not have a prepared statement. I discussed with Mr. Godley the fact that the time element intervened and I was unable to get a prepared statement. I would like to proceed verbally without a prepared statement, Mr. Chairman.

Senator STEVENSON. Please proceed.

Mr. MILLER. As the chairman has indicated, in 1965 President Johnson appointed a Crime Commission in the District of Columbia. The content of the Commission and the whole philosophy behind it tried to ascertain factually a study in which the administration of criminal justice operated in the District of Columbia. In too many instances decisions were made on surmised assumptions rather than hard facts.

I know we on the Commission were quite divided in how much time and effort we had to spend on factfinding as distinguished

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