Oklahoma
State Senate
Senator Kenneth Corn
Majority Caucus Chairman
Senate District 4
Le Flore and Sequoyah Counties
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Article
For Immediate
Release: July 15, 2005
Sen. Kenneth Corn
Senate Plan Keeps Violent Offenders Locked Up
OKLAHOMA CITY – Senator Kenneth
Corn said Friday he agrees with Rep. John
Trebilcock that violent offenders shouldn’t be released
from prison early and said that’s why the Senate’s comprehensive
prison funding plan unveiled Thursday doesn’t include any
such provisions.
“Our plan ensures that violent offenders will
stay in prison where they belong by making sure there will be enough
correctional officers on the job to keep them there and to keep
Oklahomans safe,” said Corn, chairman of the Appropriations
Sub-Committee on Public Safety and Judiciary in the Senate.
The Poteau Democrat said Trebilcock’s suggestion
in a Friday morning press release that the Senate plan will put
violent offenders back on the street is totally false and an attempt
to divert attention away from the real issues at hand – a
critical staffing shortage in the Department of Corrections and
the unwillingness of House Republicans to do anything about it.
The Senate Democrats’ comprehensive prison
funding plan calls for adding 150 correctional officers in each
of the next three years to reduce Oklahoma’s inmate to guard
ratio, which is the highest in the nation. Additionally, the plan
would add 50 probation officers at DOC next year and raise the pay
for correctional officers and their supervisors to help reduce department
turnover and improve recruiting.
The comprehensive plan also includes a series of
systemic changes, none of which would involve the early release
of violent offenders, Corn said.
The Senator said the plan will allow judges and prosecutors
to have input in the sanctions against parolees who are found to
be in technical violation of their parole – individuals who
are now automatically sent back to prison on technicalities like
not being able to find a job.
Another part of the Senate plan extends the heavily
supervised drug treatment program used by the state’s Drug
Courts to inmates already in prison.
“Neither of these innovative programs would
ever be applied to violent offenders. I firmly believe that those
who commit violent offenses should serve their full sentences,”
Corn said.
Corn said that last spring, Trebilcock, the chairman
of the House Appropriations and Budget Sub-Committee on Public Safety
and Judiciary, refused to meet with him to work on the budgets for
the state’s public safety agencies. Then, when asked why the
sub-committees hadn’t been able to complete those budgets,
Trebilcock tried to blame Corn.
“Now he’s trying to mislead the public
again. It’s the House Republicans who aren’t willing
to come to work and do what’s necessary to ensure the safety
of Oklahomans,” Corn said.
The Senator said he is committed to keeping violent
offenders behind bars and has a seven-year legislative record of
being especially tough on drug manufacturers and traffickers.
Corn said he sincerely hopes that House Republicans
plan to do more to protect Oklahoma families from the dangers created
by the DOC staffing shortage than issue press releases.
“If they don’t like our plan, then they
should propose one of their own. I’m open to considering other
ideas. What I’m not willing to consider is sitting by and
doing nothing while the safety of our citizens is at stake,”
Corn said.
For
more information contact:
Senator Corn's
Office - (405) 521-5576

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