CSG Criminal Justice Leaders Say DOJ Numbers Highlight Need to Improve
Response to People with Mental Illnesses
Leaders of The Council of State Governments (CSG) Criminal Justice Program appreciate the
Bureau of Justice Statistics' (BJS) continuing
efforts to study and draw attention to the large numbers of people with mental illnesses in the criminal
justice system.
The BJS report,
Mental Health Problems
of Prison and Jail Inmates, found that more than half of all prison and jail inmates have mental
health problems. The issue is of growing concern to state and local government officials.
"The BJS report confirms what we hear regularly from the staff on the front lines of our prisons and jails, as
well as our court and law enforcement systems: that the number of people with mental illnesses in the criminal
justice system is a growing problem we must address," said state Rep. Ward
Loyd, R-Kan., co-chair of CSG's Public Safety and Justice Task Force. "We know there are specialized strategies to address these problems that can reduce
the numbers highlighted in the report and increase public
safety.
Many of these specialized strategies are outlined in the 2002 landmark
Criminal Justice/Mental Health Consensus
Project report on improving the response to people with mental illnesses who become involved with the
criminal justice system. Communities across the country are now successfully using the kinds of collaborative
approaches and innovative policies the report promotes including initiatives that help reduce injuries and
arrests in law enforcement encounters, enable courts to ensure accountability while meeting individuals needs
and help corrections professionals reduce the numbers of individuals with mental illnesses who cycle through
prisons and jails.
"In June 2006 there were more than 8,000 people on the active mental health caseload in prisons in New York
State, which has the fourth largest prison population in the nation, said Public Safety and Justice Task Force
co-chair Assemblyman Jeff Aubry, D-N.Y.
"This isn't good for public safety, it's not good for the health of our communities, and it's not a good use of
taxpayer dollars."
"There is broad national support to address the problems highlighted by BJS' report. At the federal level we
have seen critical bipartisan leadership around this issue," said CSG Consensus Project Chair State Rep. Mike Lawlor, D-Conn. "The Mentally
Ill Offender Treatment and Crime Reduction Act of 2004 (MIOTCRA), which passed the U.S. House and Senate
unanimously under the direction of Sen. Mike DeWine (R-Ohio), Rep. Ted Strickland (D-Ohio), and others provides
much-needed support to the field."
Leaders of CSG's criminal justice program continue to call for lawmakers on both sides of the aisle to fund the
MIOTCRA
program at its authorized level of $50 million ($5 million was appropriated for fiscal year 2006). That
amount would enable state and local officials to support collaborative initiatives to improve outcomes for
people with mental illnesses involved in the criminal justice system.
To view a PDF version of this release
click here.
MEDIA RESOURCES:
Fact Sheet: Spotlights data related to people with
mental illness in the criminal justice
system
Consensus Project
Overview: Provides a brief description of the various projects that are a part of the CSG-led Criminal
Justice/Mental Health Consensus Project
Consensus Project Report:
This landmark 2002 report offers strategies on developing, implementing, and evaluating collaborative
approaches to improve the criminal justice system's response to people with mental illness
For more information on resources for media, including mental health consumers, national and state
representatives from the criminal justice and mental health systems, and legislators, please contact Hope Glassberg, 646-383-5737, or Martha
Plotkin, 202-577-9344.