| Drug Rehabilitation | Criminon Four Step Program | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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How to Start a Criminon® Activity Kit
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| The How to Start a Criminon® Activity Kit contains what you need to not only rehabilitate a person's self-respect and to turn him into a productive individual, but also to create a safer community for all. It includes: A checklist that walks you through the contents of the kit, and tells you how to get started. |
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| Each day in the United States, more than 31,000 petty and hard-core criminals are released back into their communities. Within one year, up to 80 percent of these men and women will have committed ten or twenty more crimes before being arrested again and sent back to prison. The figures speak for themselves. The 80 percent recidivism rate makes a mockery of current psychiatric-oriented rehabilitation methods, demonstrating that, for all intents and purposes, there is in fact no such thing as criminal rehabilitation. A report published by the National Council on Crime and Delinquency in America concurred, stating that there was “little evidence that either institutional programs or noninstitutional efforts to rehabilitate offenders make any appreciable difference.” And so go the revolving doors of the US penal system. |
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| Some say we are winning the war against crime, that the tougher laws, the harsher penalties and the greater number of police officers are all combining to finally bring an end to the meteoric rise of crime that marred the 1980's. However, some say that crime is still on the uprise, that the streets are more dangerous than ever, and that the facts--not the political rhetoric--reveal a younger generation gearing up for war. Someone is lying. Or so it seems. The truth is that both statements are correct. The national averages for violent crime, including murder, rape and aggravated assault, are all down, if only slightly. The reasons are simple enough: First, the tougher sentences and Three Strikes laws in several states are keeping felons off the streets and unable to commit more crime. Second, the overall population curve is down, which means that there are fewer possible offenders to begin with, especially in the most violent age range, 15 to 29 years old. Third, a number of grassroots neighborhood policing groups have enjoyed moderate success in various areas around the country. Despite the apparent promise of these grassroots movements and statistical downswings, the smart money continues to bet on prisons, and they are betting huge. Why? Because the younger generation of criminal is indeed on the brink of an all-out killing spree that will make Dodge City look like Disneyland. A closer examination of the major statistics involved makes clear why experts continue to be leery about the future. First and foremost, teenagers from 14 to 17 years old have become more violent than at any other time in tabulated history, currently committing 165% more murders than they did just ten years ago. And the number of males in this age bracket will double in one generation, as the population curve once again begins its steep rise. Simply put, we will have twice the number of possible offenders in just a few years, committing nearly five times the volume of crime that we see on the network news and front pages every day. While the near future may produce a drastically higher number of criminal offenders, the problem of the growing crime rate is actually two-fold, the second factor being the prison system. The current prison population is growing at a rate 13 times faster than that of the general population and has exceeded most facility maximums in every state. In fact, since 1980, the nation's prison population has tripled, and our country now claims more than 1.5 million people behind bars in both state and federal prisons, as well as juvenile halls and youth authority complexes. That does not include the 3.5 million on probation and parole. These numbers have put a stranglehold on the prison system, and have forced nearly all of them to operate at levels far exceeding their mandated maximums. Currently, state prisons are operating anywhere from 17 to 29% over capacity, while federal prisons have climbed to 25% above the maximum capacity. According to the Justice Department, 1995 saw the biggest inmate population growth ever in U.S. history, with over 89,000 new prisoners in American jails. And with 80% of those released from jail returning within one year, the estimated figures jump even higher. These two factors of future crime and current rates well in excess of the norm lead many in government and the private sector to demand the passage of bills for the construction of more prisons. |
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The bills are passing with ease, as a citizenry dismayed and discouraged without an effective means to curtail the violence demands some way to keep their streets safe. Nationally, two decades ago, the American price tag for its prisons was 4 billion dollars, a figure which has skyrocketed to 31 billion. |
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| Inmates and Criminon volunteers in Hungary As Washington and local governments gear up for the prison rush of the year 2000, we the citizens and taxpayers are left with one very simple proposition: Either rehabilitate the criminal, and widely establish programs such as Criminon to prevent the factors that cause crime, or start investing heavily in prison construction companies. The choice is ours. Will we have a lawless society where honest citizens are further hampered by the restrictions of a police state, or will we have a nation built upon literacy, morals and decency? As L. Ron Hubbard wrote, with Criminon and related programs, we have the ability to return to man “some of the happiness, some of the sincerity, some of the love and kindness with which he was created.” Now it is simply a question of implementing such programs widely enough to handle the problem and once again live in a world where children can safely play and men can walk without fear. |
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A Criminon supervisor instructs the staff of Dvoto Prison in Argentina on the Criminon program. |
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| KevinOwen@rehabnz.co.nz | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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