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Memorandum" of the James M. Cannon Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
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Digitized from Box 47 of the James M. Cannon Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library
June 13, 1975
MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT
CRIME MESSAGE FROM JIM CANNON
Now we have, in my judgment, a hard battle ahead of
the American people will support your enons
us. But if you join with me, and we get the mayors and
as we join with others.
the county officials to join with us, we can extend this pro-
I think I understand the importance of State govern
gram along the lines that I'm recommending. It's not
ment and some of the problems you face. And I can as
going to be easy. You will have some people who will
sure you that I and my Administration will do everythin;
want to change its character, reduce its money, put all
we can to be helpful. It's a mutual responsibility we hav
kinds of limitations and strings on it. We cannot afford
to our respective constituents, and if we work together
to have that happen.
we can get the job done.
This program has justified itself. We had a hard time
Thank you very, very much.
getting it in the first instance, and we will probably have a
NOTE: The President spoke at 2:08 p.m. in the East Room at th
difficult time in the months ahead for its extension. But
White House to participants in a special leadership conference b
ing held in Washington, D.C., under the sponsorship of the N
on its merit, it can be justified. And I'm confident that
tional Conference of State Legislatures.
YALE UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL
The President's Remarks at the Sesquicentennial Convocation
from
Dinner. April 25, 1975
Two
Thank you very much, President Brewster. Dean Goldstein, Governor
was
Grasso, Justices Stewart and White, the Secretary of HUD, Carla Hills,
yr
the Members of the House of Representatives with whom I served and
others who are now Members, but with whom I did not have that privi-
lege and pleasure, good mayor, fellow alumni students, and guests of Yale
Law School:
Obviously, it's a very great privilege and pleasure to be here at the
Yale Law School Sesquicentennial Convocation. And I defy anyone to
say that and chew gum at the same time. [Laughter]
Every time I come back to Yale, I find myself almost overwhelmed
by nostalgia. It's been SO long, and so much has happened since I first got
off the train at the New Haven station in 1935.
For the first several years, I was an assistant football coach. But dur-
ing that period, I decided against a career in athletics and set my goal
as a degree in law.
At that time, one of the entrance requirements to the Yale Law
School was a personal interview with three distinguished members of the
faculty. In my case, one of them was Professor Myres McDougal, whom
I'm delighted to see is with us tonight. It was wonderful to chat with you,
Myres, before dinner.
You might be interested to know that Professor McDougal, in re-
marks given to the Yale Law School Association in Washington last
year, mentioned the fact that he still had his notes from that interview.
He said that under the appropriate headings there were entries like the
following: good looking, well-dressed, plenty of poise, personality-
excellent. Then, under another heading: informational background, not
too good. [Laughter]
Well, Professor McDougal doesn't know-or what he doesn't know is
that while he was keeping notes on me, I was keeping notes on him. And
by coincidence, I just happen to have them with me here tonight. Under
the appropriate headings, I find entries like these: good looking, well-
dressed, plenty of poise, personality-excellent. Then under another head-
ing: informational background about football, not so good. [Laughter]
Volume 11-Number 17
444
PRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975
As I remember it, the only benchwarmer Professor McDougal took an in-
terest in at that time was Oliver Wendell Holmes.
I won't go into any more details about that interview. Suffice it to
say that Professor McDougal was extraordinarily impressed with my
capabilities and SO caught up with my capabilities and my vision of my
potentialities that in a whirlwind of enthusiasm, he wrote: "I see no rea-
son why we should not take him." [Laughter]
My biggest problem at that time was convincing the school I could
continue as a full-time assistant football coach and still carry on a full
schedule in the law school. Fortunately, I was able to convince them, and
I've always been very grateful for the help, the encouragement I consist-
ently received from such great educators as Gene Rostow, Thurman
Arnold, Jimmy James, Harry Shulman and, in particular, Myres
McDougal. And I thank you very much.
Myres, all I can say is may your retirement provide you with the same
riches of fulfillment and satisfaction your career has already brought to
the students of Yale. May God go with you.
Obviously, a lot has happened since I left Yale Law School in 1941.
I practiced law. I joined the Navy. I was elected to Congress, became
minority leader, Vice President, and now President. But no matter how
far I have traveled, something from Yale has always followed with me-
and I'm not just referring to those letters from the Alumni Fund
[laughter]-but something very special, something that adds to charac-
ter, something that clings to our character and, in time, something that
becomes our character.
It's rather hard to put feelings into words, but the motto of our school
is, "For God, for Country, and for Yale," and I think that says it all.
The 150th anniversary of this great law school, one of the outstand-
ing institutions of the world for the study of law, suggests better than I,
the subject for my remarks this evening. On May 1, we celebrate Law
Day. Most of you in this audience have devoted your academic years and
a good part of your lives to the development and to the promulgation of
the law.
Today, as President, I sense, and I think the American people sense
that we are facing a basic and a very serious problem of disregard for the
law.
and diseaser
I would like to talk with you tonight about law and the spirit of abid-
bo each other
ing by the law. I ask you to think along with me about the concern of so
many Americans about the problem of crime. And let us start with the
great Preamble of our Constitution which seeks "to insure domestic tran-
11
quility." Have we achieved on our streets and in our homes that sense of
domestic tranquility SO essential to the pursuit of happiness?
With the launching of our Bicentennial year, it has been argued that
the American Revolution was the most successful in history because the
principles of the Revolution-liberty and equality under the Iaw-became
the functioning constitutional principles of our great Government.
The Founding Fathers governed well and governed prudently, with
restraint and respect for justice and law. There was no reign of terror, no
repression, no dictatorship. The institutions they have founded became
durable and effective. Because of all of this, we tend to think of them now
as respectable and conservative. But the fact is that ours remains the great
Revolution of modern history, and we should be proud of it.
Volume 11-Number 17
PRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975
445
A leading feature of the American Revolution was its devotion to
justice under law. Once one gets past those two glorious opening para-
graphs, the Declaration of Independence reads very much like a legal
brief.
The argument was made that sound government and just laws had
to be restored to the land. The theme was that independence was needed
to restore a representative government of laws in order to secure liberty.
Our revolutionary leaders heeded John Locke's teaching: "Where
there is no law, there is no freedom." Law makes human society possible.
It pledges safety to every member so that the company of fellow human
beings can be a blessing instead of a threat. Where law exists and is re-
spected and is fairly enforced, trust replaces fear.
Do we provide that domestic tranquility which the Constitution
seeks? If we take the crime rates as an indication, the answer has to be no.
The number of violent crimes rises steadily, and we have recently
suffered the national disgrace of lawbreaking in high places. Violent
crimes on our streets and in our homes make fear pervasive. They strike
at the very roots of community life; they sever the bonds that link us as
fellow citizens; they make citizens fear each other.
Crime in high places, whether in the Federal Government, State gov-
ernment, local governments, or in business or in organized labor, sets an
example that makes it all the more difficult to foster a law-abiding spirit
among ordinary citizens.
And when we talk about obeying the law, we think of police and
courts and prisons and the whole apparatus of the law enforcement proc-
ess. But the truth is that most of us obey the law because we believe that
compliance is the right thing to do and not because the police may be
watching.
As far as law violations in high places are concerned, let me stress
this point: In the present Administration, I have made it a matter of the
highest priority to restore to the executive branch, decency, honesty, and
adherence to the law at all levels. This has been done, and it will be con-
tinued.
I urge the same effort and the same dedication in State governments,
where recently there have been too many scandals. I urge the same stand-
ards in local governments, also in industry and in labor. There is no way
to inculcate in society the spirit of law if society's leaders are not scrupu-
lously law-abiding.
We have seen how lawbreaking by officials can be stopped by the
proper functioning of our basic institutions-executive, legislative, and
judicial branches. But America has been far from successful in dealing
with the sort of crime that obsesses America day and night. I mean
street crime, crime that invades our neighborhoods and our homes-mur-
ders, robberies, rapes, muggings, holdups, break-ins-the kind of brutal
violence that makes us fearful of strangers and afraid to go out at night.
In thinking about this problem, I do not seek vindictive punishment
of the criminal, but protection of the innocent victim. The victims are
my primary concern. That is why I do not talk about law and order, and
why I return to the constitutional phrase-insuring domestic tranquility.
The overwhelming majority of Americans obey the law willingly and
without coercion, but even the most law-abiding among us are still hu-
Volume 11-Number 17
446
PRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975
man. And so it makes ordinary commonsense that we promulgate rules
and that there be enforcement of the rules to buttress the normal inclina-
tion of most people to obey the rules. As James Madison asked in The
Federalist, and I quote, "But what is government itself but the greatest
of all reflections on human nature? If men were angels," said Madison,
"no government would be necessary."
Since men and women are not angels, we must have the apparatus
of law enforcement. Those who prey on others, especially by violence, are
very, very few in number. A very small percentage of the whole popula-
tion accounts for a very large proportion of the vicious crimes committed.
For example, in one study of nearly 10,000 males born in 1945, it was
found that only 6 percent of them accounted for two-thirds of all of the
violent crimes committed by the entire group.
Most serious crimes are committed by repeaters. These relatively few,
persistent criminals who cause so much misery and fear are really the core
of the problem. The rest of the American people have a right to protec-
tion from their violence.
Most of the victims of violent crime are the poor, the old, the young,
the disadvantaged minorities, the people who live in the most crowded
parts of our cities, the most defenseless. These victims have a valid claim
on the rest of society for the protection and the personal safety that they
cannot provide for themselves-in short, for domestic tranquility.
Hardly a day passes when some politician does not call for a massive
crackdown on crime, but the problem is infinitely more complex than that.
Such an approach has not proven effective in the long haul; it is not the
American style. We need a precise and effective solution.
One problem is that our busiest courts are overloaded. They're so
overloaded that very few cases are actually tried. One study showed that
in a county in Wisconsin, only 6 percent of the convictions resulted from
cases which came to trial. According to another study, over a 3-year period
in Manhattan, only about 3 percent of the persons indicted were convicted
after trial.
I think this audience knows the explanation. It is plea bargaining—
in many cases, plea bargaining required by the ever-growing pressure of
an increased caseload. The popular notion that trial follows arrest is a
misconception in a vast majority of cases, and this audience will also be
quick to guess one of the basic reasons.
The increase in arrests has been much more rapid than the increase
in the number of judges, prosecutors, and public defenders. The most ob-
vious response to this imbalance has been to accept pleas of guilt in return
for short prison terms or sentences, or no sentences at all.
According to a recent authoritative report, half of the persons con-
victed of felonies in New York received no detention whatsoever. And of
the other half, only one-fifth were sentenced to more than one year of im-
prisonment. Imprisonment, thus, too seldom follows conviction for a
felony.
In the sixties, crime rates went higher and higher, but the number
of persons in prisons, State and Federal, actually went down. A Rand
Corporation report of one major jurisdiction showed that of all convicted
robbers with a major, prior record, only 27 percent were sent to prison
after conviction.
Volume 11-Number 17
PRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975
447
Notice, please, that I'm speaking only of convicted felons. I am not
chastising our system for determining guilt or innocence. I am urging that
virtually all of those convicted of a violent crime should be sent to prison.
And this should be done especially if a gun was involved or there was other
substantial danger or injury to a person or persons. There certainly should
be imprisonment if the convicted person has a prior record of convictions.
Most serious offenders are repeaters. We owe it to their victims-
past, present, and future-to get them off the streets. This is just everyday
commonsense, as I see it. The crime rate will go down if persons who ha-
bitually commit most of the predatory crimes are kept in prison for a rea-
sonable period, if convicted, because they will then not be free to commit
more crimes.
Convicts should be treated humanely in prison. Loss of liberty should
be the chief punishment. Improvement in the treatment of, and facilities
for prisoners is long overdue. But it is essential that there be less delay in
bringing arrested persons to trial, less plea bargaining, and more court-
room determination of guilt or innocence, and that all-or practically
all-of those actually convicted of predatory CI ime be sent to prison.
In many other areas, it is the responsibility of the Federal Govern-
ment to augment the enforcement efforts of the States when it becomes
necessary.
What else can we do? The Federal Code can be modified to make
more sentences mandatory and, therefore, punishment more certain for
those convicted of violent crimes.
What can the White House do about this? The Federal role is limited,
because most violent crimes are matters for State and local authorities.
Further, the creation of criminal sanctions and their interpretation are
the concerns of the legislative and judicial branches as well as the execu-
tive branch.
The principal role of the Federal Government in the area of crime
control has centered in providing financial and technical assistance to the
several States. However, while we are all aware that the actual control
of crime in this country is a matter primarily of State responsibility
under the Constitution, there are several areas in which it is the chief
responsibility of the Federal Government.
We can provide leadership in making funds available to add judges,
prosecutors, and public defenders to the Federal system. This Federal
model should encourage States to adopt similar priorities for the use of
their own funds and those provided by the Law Enforcement Assistance
Administration.
We can encourage better use of existing prison facilities to minimize
detention of persons convicted of minor crimes, thus making more room
for the convicted felons to be imprisoned. There are a number of esti-
mates of how much the crime rate would be reduced if all convicted crim-
inals with major records were sent to prison instead of being set free after
conviction, as too many are today.
Although we might expect the certainty of a prison sentence to serve
as a deterrent, let us remember that one obvious effect of prison is to sep-
arate lawbreakers from the law-abiding society. In totalitarian states, it's
easier to assure law and order. Dictators eliminate freedom of move-
Volume 11-Number 17
448
PRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975
ment, of speech, and of choice. They control the news media and the edu-
cational system. They conscript the entire society, and deprive people of
basic civil liberties. By such methods, crime can be strictly controlled.
But, in effect, the entire society becomes one huge prison. This is not a
choice we are willing to consider.
Edmund Burke commented appropriately in his Reflections on the
French Revolution. Burke said, and I quote, "To make a government
requires no great prudence. Settle the seat of power, teach obedience, and
the work is done. To give freedom is still more easy. It is not necessary to
guide; it only requires to let go the rein. But to form a free government,
that is, to temper together these opposite elements of liberty and re-
straint in one consistent work, requires much thought, deep reflection, a
sagacious, powerful, and combining mind."
Since these words were written, the world has changed profoundly.
But the old question still remains: Can a free people restrain crime with-
out sacrificing fundamental liberties and a heritage of compassion?
I am confident of the American answer. Let it become a vital element
on America's new agenda. Let us show that we can temper together those
opposite elements of liberty and restraint into one consistent whole.
Let us set an example for the world of a law-abiding America glory-
ing in its freedom as well as its respect for law. Let us, at last, fufill the
constitutional promise of domestic tranquility for all of our law-abiding
citizens.
Thank you very much.
NOTE: The President spoke at 9:57 p.m. in Woolsey Hall at the Yale University Law
School, New Haven, Conn.
Now we have, in my judgment, a hard battle ahead of
the American people will support your enons
as. But if you join with me, and we get the mayors and
as we join with others.
the county officials to join with us, we can extend this pro-
I think I understand the importance of State govern
gram along the lines that I'm recommending. It's not
ment and some of the problems you face. And I can a
going to be easy. You will have some people who will
sure you that I and my Administration will do everythin
want to change its character, reduce its money, put all
we can to be helpful. It's a mutual responsibility we hav
kinds of limitations and strings on it. We cannot afford
to our respective constituents, and if we work togethe
to have that happen.
we can get the job done.
This program has justified itself. We had a hard time
Thank you very, very much.
getting it in the first instance, and we will probably have a
NOTE: The President spoke at 2:08 p.m. in the East Room at t
difficult time in the months ahead for its extension. But
White House to participants in a special leadership conference 1
ing held in Washington, D.C., under the sponsorship of the N
on its merit, it can be justified. And I'm confident that
tional Conference of State Legislatures.
YALE UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL
The President's Remarks at the Sesquicentennial Convocation
Dinner. April 25, 1975
Thank you very much, President Brewster. Dean Goldstein, Governor
Grasso, Justices Stewart and White, the Secretary of HUD, Carla Hills,
the Members of the House of Representatives with whom I served and
others who are now Members, but with whom I did not have that privi-
lege and pleasure, good mayor, fellow alumni students, and guests of Yale
Law School:
Obviously, it's a very great privilege and pleasure to be here at the
Yale Law School Sesquicentennial Convocation. And I defy anyone to
say that and chew gum at the same time. [Laughter]
Every time I come back to Yale, I find myself almost overwhelmed
by nostalgia. It's been so long, and so much has happened since I first got
off the train at the New Haven station in 1935.
For the first several years, I was an assistant football coach. But dur-
ing that period, I decided against a career in athletics and set my goal
as a degree in law.
At that time, one of the entrance requirements to the Yale Law
School was a personal interview with three distinguished members of the
faculty. In my case, one of them was Professor Myres McDougal, whom
I'm delighted to see is with us tonight. It was wonderful to chat with you,
Myres, before dinner.
You might be interested to know that Professor McDougal, in re-
marks given to the Yale Law School Association in Washington last
year, mentioned the fact that he still had his notes from that interview.
He said that under the appropriate headings there were entries like the
following: good looking, well-dressed, plenty of poise, personality-
excellent. Then, under another heading: informational background, not
too good. [Laughter]
Well, Professor McDougal doesn't know-or what he doesn't know is
that while he was keeping notes on me, I was keeping notes on him. And
by coincidence, I just happen to have them with me here tonight. Under
the appropriate headings, I find entries like these: good looking, well-
dressed, plenty of poise, personality-excellent. Then under another head-
ing: informational background about football, not so good. [Laughter]
Volume 11-Number 17
GERALD
444
PRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD; 1975
As I remember it, the only benchwarmer Professor McDougal took an in-
terest in at that time was Oliver Wendell Holmes.
I won't go into any more details about that interview. Suffice it to
say that Professor McDougal was extraordinarily impressed with my
capabilities and so caught up with my capabilities and my vision of my
potentialities that in a whirlwind of enthusiasm, he wrote: "I see no rea-
son why we should not take him." [Laughter]
My biggest problem at that time was convincing the school I could
continue as a full-time assistant football coach and still carry on a full
schedule in the law school. Fortunately, I was able to convince them, and
I've always been very grateful for the help, the encouragement I consist-
ently received from such great educators as Gene Rostow, Thurman
Arnold, Jimmy James, Harry Shulman and, in particular, Myres
McDougal. And I thank you very much.
Myres, all I can say is may your retirement provide you with the same
riches of fulfillment and satisfaction your career has already brought to
the students of Yale. May God go with you.
Obviously, a lot has happened since I left Yale Law School in 1941.
I practiced law. I joined the Navy. I was elected to Congress, became
minority leader, Vice President, and now President. But no matter how
far I have traveled, something from Yale has always followed with me-
and I'm not just referring to those letters from the Alumni Fund
[laughter]-but something very special, something that adds to charac-
ter, something that clings to our character and, in time, something that
becomes our character.
It's rather hard to put feelings into words, but the motto of our school
is, "For God, for Country, and for Yale," and I think that says it all.
The 150th anniversary of this great law school, one of the outstand-
ing institutions of the world for the study of law, suggests better than I,
the subject for my remarks this evening. On May 1, we celebrate Law
Day. Most of you in this audience have devoted your academic years and
a good part of your lives to the development and to the promulgation of
the law.
Today, as President, I sense, and I think the American people sense
that we are facing a basic and a very serious problem of disregard for the
law.
I would like to talk with you tonight about law and the spirit of abid-
ing by the law. I ask you to think along with me about the concern of so
many Americans about the problem of crime. And let us start with the
great Preamble of our Constitution which seeks "to insure domestic tran-
quility." Have we achieved on our streets and in our homes that sense of
domestic tranquility so essential to the pursuit of happiness?
With the launching of our Bicentennial year, it has been argued that
the American Revolution was the most successful in history because the
principles of the Revolution-liberty and equality under the Iaw-became
the functioning constitutional principles of our great Government.
The Founding Fathers governed well and governed prudently, with
restraint and respect for justice and law. There was no reign of terror, no
repression, no dictatorship. The institutions they have founded became
&
FORD
durable and effective. Because of all of this, we tend to think of them now
as respectable and conservative. But the fact is that ours remains the great
GERALD
Revolution of modern history, and we should be proud of it.
Volume 11-Number 17
PRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975
445
A leading feature of the American Revolution was its devotion to
justice under law. Once one gets past those two glorious opening para-
graphs, the Declaration of Independence reads very much like a legal
brief.
The argument was made that sound government and just laws had
to be restored to the land. The theme was that independence was needed
to restore a representative government of laws in order to secure liberty.
Our revolutionary leaders heeded John Locke's teaching: "Where
there is no law, there is no freedom." Law makes human society possible.
It pledges safety to every member so that the company of fellow human
beings can be a blessing instead of a threat. Where law exists and is re-
spected and is fairly enforced, trust replaces fear.
Do we provide that domestic tranquility which the Constitution
seeks? If we take the crime rates as an indication, the answer has to be no.
The number of violent crimes rises steadily, and we have recently
suffered the national disgrace of lawbreaking in high places. Violent
crimes on our streets and in our homes make fear pervasive. They strike
at the very roots of community life; they sever the bonds that link us as
fellow citizens; they make citizens fear each other.
Crime in high places, whether in the Federal Government, State gov-
ernment, local governments, or in business or in organized labor, sets an
example that makes it all the more difficult to foster a law-abiding spirit
among ordinary citizens.
And when we talk about obeying the law, we think of police and
courts and prisons and the whole apparatus of the law enforcement proc-
ess. But the truth is that most of us obey the law because we believe that
compliance is the right thing to do and not because the police may be
watching.
As far as law violations in high places are concerned, let me stress
this point: In the present Administration, I have made it a matter of the
highest priority to restore to the executive branch, decency, honesty, and
adherence to the law at all levels. This has been done, and it will be con-
tinued.
I urge the same effort and the same dedication in State governments,
where recently there have been too many scandals. I urge the same stand-
ards in local governments, also in industry and in labor. There is no way
to inculcate in society the spirit of law if society's leaders are not scrupu-
lously law-abiding.
We have seen how lawbreaking by officials can be stopped by the
proper functioning of our basic institutions-executive, legislative, and
judicial branches. But America has been far from successful in dealing
with the sort of crime that obsesses America day and night. I mean
street crime, crime that invades our neighborhoods and our homes-mur-
ders, robberies, rapes, muggings, holdups, break-ins-the kind of brutal
violence that makes us fearful of strangers and afraid to go out at night.
In thinking about this problem, I do not seek vindictive punishment
of the criminal, but protection of the innocent victim. The victims are
my primary concern. That is why I do not talk about law and order, and
why I return to the constitutional phrase-insuring domestic tranquility.
The overwhelming majority of Americans obey the law willingly and
without coercion, but even the most law-abiding among us are still hu-
FO
Volume 11-Number 17
GERALD
446
PRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975
man. And so it makes ordinary commonsense that we promulgate rules
and that there be enforcement of the rules to buttress the normal inclina-
tion of most people to obey the rules. As James Madison asked in The
Federalist, and I quote, "But what is government itself but the greatest
of all reflections on human nature? If men were angels," said Madison,
"no government would be necessary."
Since men and women are not angels, we must have the apparatus
of law enforcement. Those who prey on others, especially by violence, are
very, very few in number. A very small percentage of the whole popula-
tion accounts for a very large proportion of the vicious crimes committed.
For example, in one study of nearly 10,000 males born in 1945, it was
found that only 6 percent of them accounted for two-thirds of all of the
violent crimes committed by the entire group.
Most serious crimes are committed by repeaters. These relatively few,
persistent criminals who cause so much misery and fear are really the core
of the problem. The rest of the American people have a right to protec-
tion from their violence.
Most of the victims of violent crime are the poor, the old, the young,
the disadvantaged minorities, the people who live in the most crowded
parts of our cities, the most defenseless. These victims have a valid claim
on the rest of society for the protection and the personal safety that they
cannot provide for themselves-in short, for domestic tranquility.
Hardly a day passes when some politician does not call for a massive
crackdown on crime, but the problem is infinitely more complex than that.
Such an approach has not proven effective in the long haul; it is not the
American style. We need a precise and effective solution.
One problem is that our busiest courts are overloaded. They're so
overloaded that very few cases are actually tried. One study showed that
in a county in Wisconsin, only 6 percent of the convictions resulted from
cases which came to trial. According to another study, over a 3-year period
in Manhattan, only about 3 percent of the persons indicted were convicted
after trial.
I think this audience knows the explanation. It is plea bargaining-
in many cases, plea bargaining required by the ever-growing pressure of
an increased caseload. The popular notion that trial follows arrest is a
misconception in a vast majority of cases, and this audience will also be
quick to guess one of the basic reasons.
The increase in arrests has been much more rapid than the increase
in the number of judges, prosecutors, and public defenders. The most ob-
vious response to this imbalance has been to accept pleas of guilt in return
for short prison terms or sentences, or no sentences at all.
According to a recent authoritative report, half of the persons con-
victed of felonies in New York received no detention whatsoever. And of
the other half, only one-fifth were sentenced to more than one year of im-
prisonment. Imprisonment, thus, too seldom follows conviction for a
felony.
In the sixties, crime rates went higher and higher, but the number
of persons in prisons, State and Federal, actually went down. A Rand
Corporation report of one major jurisdiction showed that of all convicted
robbers with a major, prior record, only 27 percent were sent to prison
after conviction.
BERALD FORD LIBRARY
Volume 11-Number 17
Notice, please, that I'm speaking only of convicted felons. I am not
chastising our system for determining guilt or innocence. I am urging that
virtually all of those convicted of a violent crime should be sent to prison.
And this should be done especially if a gun was involved or there was other
substantial danger or injury to a person or persons. There certainly should
be imprisonment if the convicted person has a prior record of convictions.
Most serious offenders are repeaters. We owe it to their victims-
past, present, and future-to get them off the streets. This is just everyday
commonsense, as I see it. The crime rate will go down if persons who ha-
bitually commit most of the predatory crimes are kept in prison for a rea-
sonable period, if convicted, because they will then not be free to commit
more crimes.
Convicts should be treated humanely in prison. Loss of liberty should
be the chief punishment. Improvement in the treatment of, and facilities
for prisoners is long overdue. But it is essential that there be less delay in
bringing arrested persons to trial, less plea bargaining, and more court-
room determination of guilt or innocence, and that all-or practically
all-of those actually convicted of predatory crime be sent to prison.
In many other areas, it is the responsibility of the Federal Govern-
ment to augment the enforcement efforts of the States when it becomes
necessary.
What else can we do? The Federal Code can be modified to make
more sentences mandatory and, therefore, punishment more certain for
those convicted of violent crimes.
What can the White House do about this? The Federal role is limited,
because most violent crimes are matters for State and local authorities.
Further, the creation of criminal sanctions and their interpretation are
the concerns of the legislative and judicial branches as well as the execu-
tive branch.
The principal role of the Federal Government in the area of crime
control has centered in providing financial and technical assistance to the
several States. However, while we are all aware that the actual control
of crime in this country is a matter primarily of State responsibility
under the Constitution, there are several areas in which it is the chief
responsibility of the Federal Government.
We can provide leadership in making funds available to add judges,
prosecutors, and public defenders to the Federal system. This Federal
model should encourage States to adopt similar priorities for the use of
their own funds and those provided by the Law Enforcement Assistance
Administration.
We can encourage better use of existing prison facilities to minimize
detention of persons convicted of minor crimes, thus making more room
for the convicted felons to be imprisoned. There are a number of esti-
mates of how much the crime rate would be reduced if all convicted crim-
inals with major records were sent to prison instead of being set free after
conviction, as too many are today.
Although we might expect the certainty of a prison sentence to serve
as a deterrent, let us remember that one obvious effect of prison is to sep-
arate lawbreakers from the law-abiding society. In totalitarian states, it's
easier to assure law and order. Dictators eliminate freedom of move-
is
FORD
Volume 11-Number 17
GERALD
443
PRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975
ment, of speech, and of choice. They control the news media and the edu-
cational system. They conscript the entire society, and deprive people of
basic civil liberties. By such methods, crime can be strictly controlled.
But, in effect, the entire society becomes one huge prison. This is not a
choice we are willing to consider.
Edmund Burke commented appropriately in his Reflections on the
French Revolution. Burke said, and I quote, "To make a government
requires no great prudence. Settle the seat of power, teach obedience, and
the work is done. To give freedom is still more easy. It is not necessary to
guide; it only requires to let go the rein. But to form a free government,
that is, to temper together these opposite elements of liberty and re-
straint in one consistent work, requires much thought, deep reflection, a
sagacious, powerful, and combining mind."
Since these words were written, the world has changed profoundly.
But the old question still remains: Can a free people restrain crime with-
out sacrificing fundamental liberties and a heritage of compassion?
I am confident of the American answer. Let it become a vital element
on America's new agenda. Let us show that we can temper together those
opposite elements of liberty and restraint into one consistent whole.
Let us set an example for the world of a law-abiding America glory-
ing in its freedom as well as its respect for law. Let us, at last, fufill the
constitutional promise of domestic tranquility for all of our law-abiding
citizens.
Thank you very much.
NOTE: The President spoke at 9:57 p.m. in Woolsey Hall at the Yale University Law
School, New Haven, Conn.
&
FORD
GERALD
June 5, 1975
TO:
DICK PARSONS
FROM:
JIM CANNON
SUBJECT:
CRIME MESSAGE Dave
Here are Don Rumsfeld's thoughts on what the crime
message should accomplish:
1. It is the basic message he will want to
live with from now until November of 1976.
2. It should show:
a. He gives a damn about what's happening
in the country.
b. He cares about the victims of crime.
C. He has proposed an anti-crime program to
Congress.
d. Congress won't pass it.
3. The message should be thoughtful and lasting,
have a broad appeal, and be slightly right of
center.
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S. Cannon
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
June 13, 1975
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
FROM:
Jim Cannon
SUBJECT:
Crime Message
Attached for your consideration is the final draft of your special message
to the Congress on crime. The following matters remain unresolved:
I.
Compensation to Victims of Crime
Issue: Should the Crime Message specifically endorse
the victims' compensation provision of S. 1?
Discussion:
Based on 1973 data, the Department of Justice has estimated that
revenues for a victims' compensation fund, such as would be
established by S. 1, would approximate $15. 4 million annually,
and that pay-outs to victims of crimes would approximate
$7. 6 million annually, not including compensation for lost earnings
due to disability. The Department indicates that, while it is
impossible to determine the potential liability for lost earnings
due to disability, the remaining revenues available to the fund
should be sufficient to cover all such liability. The Department's
analysis is attached at Tab A.
OMB has expressed concern that the Department's estimate may
understate, by a wide margin, the number of potential claimants
for compensation, since:
a) it is based on reported crime which, itself, understates
the level of actual crime by as much as 300 to 500 per
cent; and
b) it does not take into account cases commenced in State
courts which involve a Federal crime (i. e., concurrent
jurisdiction cases).
2
OMB also questions the Department's estimate regarding revenues
available to the victims' compensation fund, since the year upon
which the Department's estimate is based, 1973, was a year of
unusually high criminal fine collections. The OMB analysis is
attached at Tab B.
Members of my staff have canvassed the several States which have
enacted victims' compensation programs to ascertain how such
programs work on the State level. Most States feel that their
victims' compensation programs are working well. They indicate
that these programs assist law enforcement authorities in eliciting
the victim's assistance in the criminal investigatory and adjudicatory
processes. In almost every State, the number of claims filed and
the total cost of the program are much lower than originally
anticipated. A more detailed analysis of State victims' compensa-
tion programs is attached at Tab C.
Recommendations:
The Attorney General, the Counsel to the President and I recommend
that you specifically endorse the victims' compensation concept in
the Crime Message.
OMB, Jack Marsh, Bob Goldwin and Max Friedersdorf have
recommended that you reserve judgment on this matter.
Max reports that there is no clear-cut Congressional view on this
issue.
Expressly Endorse
Reserve Judgment
II.
Gun Control
Issue: How large an increase in ATF investigatory
personnel should you propose in the Crime
Message?
Discussion:
You earlier indicated your desire to have the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms substantially increase its enforcement
activities in the nation's ten largest metropolitan areas. ATF
proposes to increase its present field staff by approximately
3
1,000 additional firearms investigators and 500 additional
supporting personnel, at a cost of $46. 7 million annually.
These additional investigators would concentrate on two major
problems: tracing all firearms involved in crime, and intensifying
efforts to disarm and convict significant weapons offenders.
Recommendations:
OMB recommends a more limited approach until the value of the
intensified program can be demonstrated. Specifically, OMB
recommends doubling existing firearms investigators in the nation's
ten largest cities. This would result in 364 additional firearms
investigators and 195 additional supporting personnel, at a cost of
$16. 6 million annually.
The Counsel to the President and I recommend that you direct
ATF to employ and train an additional 500 firearms investigators
(necessitating 250 additional support personnel), at an approximate
cost of $23. 3 million annually.
364
500
1,000
Additionally, Bob Goldwin has objected to several of the exculpatory
provisions regarding the imposition of mandatory sentences. Under
your proposal, a judge could avoid imposing a mandatory sentence if
he found and specified in writing one or more of the following: that
the defendant was under 18, or was mentally impaired, or was
acting under substantial duress, or was implicated in a crime
actually committed by others and participated in the crime only in
a very minor way.
Bob argues that, since substantial numbers of violent crimes are
committed by persons under 18, your proposal should be modified
to require the imposition of a mandatory sentence for persons
16 years of age or older, Furthermore, Bob believes that the
terms "mentally impaired" and "substantial duress" are vague
and may provide lenient judges with a convenient reason for not
imposing a jail sentence. He recommends that these provisions
be dropped.
4
The Attorney General takes strong exception to Bob's recommenda-
tions. He points out that few persons under age 18 commit Federal
crimes. Therefore, lowering to 16 the age at which a person
becomes subject to mandatory imprisonment is not very meaningful
at the Federal level. Further, to the extent that there are
16- and 17-year-old Federal offenders, special facilities would
have to be constructed to house them, because the Juvenile Justice
and Delinquency Prevention Act prohibits their being comingled
with adult offenders. (Placement of these offenders in existing
Federal Youth Facilities would not be lawful, since those facilities
house persons up to 25 years of age). The Attorney General also
points out that the terms "mentally impaired" and "substantial
duress" have meaning to the legal community and are necessary
to the successful implementation of a mandatory sentencing scheme.
Therefore, he recommends that your proposal be left intact.
The Counsel to the President and I concur in the Attorney General's
recommendation.
Leave Intact
Change per Bob Goldwin's Suggestion
Memorandum
TO
:
Ronald Gainer
DATE: May 30, 1975
Deputy Director, OPP
FROM :
Edward D. Jones, III
Office of Policy and Planning
SUBJECT:
Cost Analysis of S. 1 -- Victim Compensation Fund
Introduction and Summary
This memorandum presents estimates of the expected
revenues and dollar claims of the Victim Compensation Fund
outlined in S. 1. The fund mechanism is complex, and the
data available for evaluating its cost-effectiveness
limited. As a result, the estimates derived below are
based upon several critical assumptions, and, thus, should
be used with caution.
Based upon 1973 data, anticipated revenues of the Fund
are approximately $15.4 million, and anticipated payouts
$7.6 million. The payout figure does not include compen-
sation for lost earnings due to disability because that
component was impossible to determine. Nevertheless, it
appears that the revenues going into the Fund are sufficient
to cover disability compensation, additional victims,
unusually high medical claims, and administrative expenses.
Revenues
The Victim Compensation Fund relies for revenues upon
(a) criminal fines collected in United States courts and
by the Attorney General, (b) twenty percent of the net
profits of Federal Prison Industries, and (c) public or
private donations. Donations to the Fund will likely be
minimal, and are thus assumed to be non-existent for the
purpose of this analysis.
Criminal fines collected in FY 1973 in all judicial
districts were $14,034,546. 1/ Under the provisions of S. 1,
1/ Executive Office of the United States Attorneys, Statistical
Yearbook, Fiscal Year 1973, Table 5.
Buy U.S. Savings Bonds Regularly on the Payroll Savings Plan
-2--
the level of fines are significantly increased for criminal
offenses. Moreover, collection procedures will be enhanced.
Therefore, it is likely that fines available to the Fund
will increase markedly. This is, of course, dependent upon
judicial discretion regarding the assessment of higher fines.
Total net profits of Federal Prison Industries in
FY 1973 were $6,610,151. 2/ Twenty percent, or $1,322,030,
would be available to the Victim Compensation Fund under
S. 1 provisions. Federal Prison Industries under S. 1 will
have greater access to compete with private industry. Thus,
it is likely that net profits -- and, hence, the contribution
to the Fund -- will increase, although the extent of such
increases are uncertain.
A conservative estimate of revenues of the Fund, based
upon FY 1973 data, is $15,356,576.
Compensation
Claimants eligible for compensation from the Fund are
victims of federal jurisdiction offenses who sustain personal
injury. In the event of death, the victims' survivors may be
compensated. Bodily injury and ensuing losses are covered
up to a maximum of $50,000. 3/ However, compensation by the
Fund is secondary to all other sources.
Assaultive offenses 5/ commenced in United States District
Courts in FY 1973 were:
Homicide
144
Assault
695
Sex Offenses
180
2/ Federal Prison Industries Financial and Operating Report,
FY 1974, p. 2.
3/ The Fund may compensate for the actual pecuniary loss of
the claimant, and loss of earnings if disability extends longer
than 90 days.
4/ This is not reflected in the estimates below. Consequently,
those estimates overstate expected compensation from the Fund.
5/ Data from Administrative Office of U.S. Courts, Annual
Report of the Director, 1974, Table D2. Potential assaultive
violence in the 98 kidnapping cases commenced in FY 1973 cannot
be determined. Consequently, this offense is not analyzed.
-3-
The homicide figure is probably an accurate indicator of
victimization for this crime. A comparison of Uniform Crime
Reports (UCR) incident data and National Crime Panel (NCP)
victimization data indicates for 1973 consistent crime rates
for rape. 6/ Thus, the sex offense rate above is a good
approximation of victimization for this crime. Unfortunately,
a similar comparison indicates that the figure for assault is
a poor estimator, likely understating dramatically victimi-
zations occurring in federal jurisdiction. 7/ Consequently,
this figure is adjusted upward by a factor of 2.6. Thus,
the number of anticipated claimants by assaultive crime type
for the analysis are:
Homicide 144
Assault
1807
Sex Offerses 180
The present value of the expected lifetime earnings
foregone by the average homicide victim in 1972 was $99,036.
This exceeds the maximum permissible compensation to a victim's
surviving dependent by $49,036. Therefore, it is assumed that
the dependents of the 144 homicide victims would receive the
maximum $50,000, totalling $7,200,000.
Based upon National Crime Panel Survey data, the average
rape victim incurred medical expenses of $120.52. Furthermore,
less than five percent of the survey respondents indicated
receipt of compensation for expenses incurred. Therefore, it
is assumed that the 180 sex offense victims would be compen-
sated approximately $21,700 for medical expenses.
Again, based upon National Crime Panel Survey data, the
average victim of serious assault incurred medical expenses of
6/ Federal Bureau of Investigation, Uniform Crime Reports
for the United States, 1973, pp. 11-13; Law Enforcement
Assistance Administration, Criminal Victimization in the
United States, January-June 1973, Table 1. The UCR rate incident for
rape is 47 per 100,000 females in 1973; the NCP victimization rate
is 50 per 100,000 females for the first half of 1973.
7/ The UCR incident rate for aggravated assault is 198 per
100,000 persons; the NCP victimization rate is 510 per 100,000
persons, 2.6 times higher than the UCR rate.
-4-
$224.57. Only about seven percent of the Survey respondents
indicated receipt of compensation for expenses incurred.
Therefore, it is assumed that the 1807 victims of assault
would be compensated approximately $405,800.
For sex offenses and assault, disability loss of income
could not be calculated. Excluding disability, the compen-
sation totals for the three crimes above total $7,627,500:
This represents about 54% of estimated revenues. The remaining
46% of revenues should be sufficient to cover disability
compensation, additional victims, unusually high medical
claims, and administrative expenses.
B
Compensation to Victims of Crime
OMB Analysis
The Department estimates that revenues for the
Victim Compensation Fund would approximate $15.4
million annually, derived from (a) criminal fines
collected in U.S. Courts and by the Attorney
General and (b) twenty percent of the net profits
of Federal Prison Industries. They estimate that
disbursements will come close to utilizing the
full amount of the Fund. The Department points
out that revenues to the Fund will grow if
increases in criminal fines proposed by the
President are approved.
The Department's calculations for disbursements
under the Fund are based on assaultive offenses
cases commenced in U.S. District Courts in 1973,
adjusted by LEAA's recent victimization survey
to account for unreported crimes. (The
Department's analysis at Tab D indicates that
the data for evaluating this program are limited
and should be used with caution.) These offenses
are priced as follows:
Adjusted for
No. of
Unreported
Xs expected
Cases
Crime
Total
Payments
Total
Homicide
144
--
144
$ 50,000
7,200,000
(maximum
payments
to
beneficiaries)
Assault
695
1,112
1,807
$224.57
405,800
(average
medical
expenses)
Sex Offenses
180
--
180
$120.52
21,700
(average
medical
expenses)
1,019
1,112
2,131
$7,627,500*
*Excludes disability compensation, which could be sizeable.
The Department believes that cases commenced in
U.S. Courts are the best available measure of the
extent of Federal crime violations likely to result
in physical injury. Cases commenced includes:
proceedings commenced by indictments, information
with indictment waived, information - other, cases
removed from state courts, juvenile delinquency
proceedings, and all other proceedings. Of the
40,367 Federal cases commenced in 1973, 1,019 were
classified as assaultive violence cases resulting
in personal injury. Based on data supplied by the
Executive Office of U.S. Attorneys, cases commenced
for assaultive violence crimes parallels very
closely with "matters received, which includes
cases developed by Federal investigative agencies,
direct reports by victims to U.S. Attorneys, and
cases referred by state and local police as being
primarily Federal violations. From this data, the
Department concludes that "cases commenced" fairly
well covers the extent of assaultive violence crimes
that come to the attention of Federal authorities.
Even though the national crime rate has increased
dramatically since 1973 in almost all categories,
the Department's projections indicate that Federal
assaultive violence cases have remained about
constant. Big increases have occurred in state
and local assaultive crimes.
OMB is concerned that the data used in the Department's
tabulations may understate--by a wide margin--the number
of potential claimants for compensation. For example:
"cases commenced" deals only with reported crime.
As LEAA's recent victimization study revealed,
unreported crime may be as much as 300-500 per-
cent greater. Reported crime may increase
dramatically with the advent of compensation.
There is presently no data available to
indicate the extent of non-reported Federal
crime violations.
The Department did adjust commenced cases for the
assault category by a factor of 2.6 (we have no
basis to determine the adequacy of this adjustment)
to accommodate unreported crimes in that area, but
made no adjustment for homicides or sex offenses.
We have no basis to challenge the homicide rate
assumption, but we do question the assumption that
commenced cases for sex offenses is an accurate
measure of victimization, in view of the charge
that 4 to 10 rapes are unreported for every
one that is reported.
The Department' data does not take into
account potential dompensation claimants
of concurrent jurisdiction cases tried in
state courts. There is no data to determine
the impact of this omission, but the
Department believes that the number of
physical injury cases would not be large.
OMB also has questions about the Department's
projections for revenues available to the Compensation
Fund. As the following table indicates, fiscal 1973
(the base projected by the Department) was an unusually
high year for criminal fine collections:
Fiscal Year
Criminal Fines Collected
1974
12,179,797
1973
14,034,546
1972
12,801,716
The Department assumes that revenues to the Fund will
grow if increases in criminal fines being proposed by
the President are approved and imposed by the Courts.
The Department's proposal also assumes that 20 percent
of the dividends from Federal Prison Industries will
be devoted to the Compensation Fund. Presently, these
dividends are used for educational and vocational
programs at Federal prisons. Use of the dividends
for other purposes would reduce the level of programs
presently being funded or create a need for new
appropriations to avoid cutbacks.
OMB is concerned that the Department's estimate of
about $15 million may significantly understate the
number and size of potential compensation payments
If compensation generates additional reporting of
crime, and if there are significant numbers of
claimants from concurrent jurisdiction crimes,
potential claimants may be many times greater
than the Department's projections.
Budget
Increases
However, data presently available is insufficient
to determine the impact of this program with any
real precision.
?
BRD points out that the proposal to direct criminal
fines into the Compensation Fund violates OMB policy
against earmarking of General Fund receipts. Annual
disbursements from the Fund would increase the budget
deficit by a like amount because those receipts would
no longer be available to finance regular government
operations. In accordance with Section 401 of the
Congressional Budget Act (P.L. 93-344), provision
should be made in proposed implementing legislation
to make the fund available only in such amounts as
are provided in appropriation acts. Otherwise,
the legislation might be rejected out of hand
because it would constitute backdoor financing.
State Victims¹ Compensation Programs
Nationally, there are twelve States (Alaska, California, Delaware,
Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New
Jersey, New York and Washington) that provide for compensation to
victims of crimes. Seven other States (Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
North Dakota, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Wisconsin) are actively
considering adoption of a crime victims' compensation scheme.
Virtually all of these programs operate on a "last resort" basis, pursuant
to which victims' compensation benefits are secondary to most other forms
of available, privately secured financial assistance. Some States limit
benefits to persons who meet a financial need test. These States incur
much higher administrative costs than do those States which employ no
financial need test.
Most States feel that their crime victims' compensation programs are
working well. They indicate that these programs assist law enforcement
authorities in eliciting victims' assistance in the criminal investigation
process. The general experience of the States is that about two out of
every three claims result in a pay-out. In almost every State, however,
the number of claims filed and the total cost of the program are much less
than originally anticipated.
Attached is a chart which identifies essential elements of existing State
programs.
State Victims' Compensation Programs
Estimated
Estimated
Year
Maximum
1975
Limitation on
FY 1975
State
Enacted
Administrative Mechanism
Beneficiaries
Benefit
Caseload
Right of Recovery
Budget
Alaska
1973
Violent Crimes
Victim and
**
Compensation Board
Dependents
$10,000
110
None
$ 175,000
$10,000 Med.
Victim and
$10,000 Wage
California
1966
State Board of Control
Dependents
$ 3,000 Rehab.
6,500
Financial Need
$4-6 Million
Victim,
$10,000 plus
Violent Crimes
Dependents
15% Lawyers
Delaware
1974
Compensation Board
and Others
Fee
100
None
$ 125,000
Criminal Injuries
Victim, Dependents
Hawaii
1967
Compensation Commission
and Others
$10,000
125
None
$ 175,000
Victim and
Illinois
1973
Court of Claims
Dependents
$10,000
1,200
None
$ 650,000
Criminal Injuries
Victim, Dependents
Maryland
1968
Compensation Board
and Others
$45,000
600
Financial Need
$1,500,000
Victim and
Massachusetts
1968
District Court
Dependents
$10,000
400
None
$ 650,000
Crime Victims
Victim, Dependents
Minnesota
1974
Reparations Board
and Others
$10,000
200
None
$ 100,000
*
Victim, Dependents
Nevada
1969
State Board of Examiners
and Others
$ 5,000
30
Financial Need
$ 25,000
Violent Crimes
Victim, Dependents
New Jersey
1971
Compensation Board
and Others
$10,000
2,000
None
$1,000,000
Crime Victims
Victim, Dependents
Unlimited Med.
New York
1966
Compensation Board
and Others
$15,000 Wage
2,400
Financial Need
$3,000,000
Crime Victims Compensation
Division of Department of
Victim and
***
Washington
1973
Labor and Industries
Dependents
None
600
None
$ 900,000
*
Nevada's law only compensates those injured as a result of a "good samaritan" act, such as coming to the aid of a police
officer in trouble.
**
Bill to provide for others has been passed by Legislature and is awaiting Governor's signature.
This estimate covers both the 1975 and 1976 Fiscal Years.
Page data
- Page
- 1
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- document
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Document data
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"ocrText": "The original documents are located in Box 47, folder \"1975/06/13 - Crime Message\nMemorandum\" of the James M. Cannon Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.\nCopyright Notice\nThe copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of\nphotocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald Ford donated to the United\nStates of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections.\nWorks prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public\ndomain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to\nremain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid\ncopyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.\nDigitized from Box 47 of the James M. Cannon Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library\nJune 13, 1975\nMEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT\nCRIME MESSAGE FROM JIM CANNON\nNow we have, in my judgment, a hard battle ahead of\nthe American people will support your enons\nus. But if you join with me, and we get the mayors and\nas we join with others.\nthe county officials to join with us, we can extend this pro-\nI think I understand the importance of State govern\ngram along the lines that I'm recommending. It's not\nment and some of the problems you face. And I can as\ngoing to be easy. You will have some people who will\nsure you that I and my Administration will do everythin;\nwant to change its character, reduce its money, put all\nwe can to be helpful. It's a mutual responsibility we hav\nkinds of limitations and strings on it. We cannot afford\nto our respective constituents, and if we work together\nto have that happen.\nwe can get the job done.\nThis program has justified itself. We had a hard time\nThank you very, very much.\ngetting it in the first instance, and we will probably have a\nNOTE: The President spoke at 2:08 p.m. in the East Room at th\ndifficult time in the months ahead for its extension. But\nWhite House to participants in a special leadership conference b\ning held in Washington, D.C., under the sponsorship of the N\non its merit, it can be justified. And I'm confident that\ntional Conference of State Legislatures.\nYALE UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL\nThe President's Remarks at the Sesquicentennial Convocation\nfrom\nDinner. April 25, 1975\nTwo\nThank you very much, President Brewster. Dean Goldstein, Governor\nwas\nGrasso, Justices Stewart and White, the Secretary of HUD, Carla Hills,\nyr\nthe Members of the House of Representatives with whom I served and\nothers who are now Members, but with whom I did not have that privi-\nlege and pleasure, good mayor, fellow alumni students, and guests of Yale\nLaw School:\nObviously, it's a very great privilege and pleasure to be here at the\nYale Law School Sesquicentennial Convocation. And I defy anyone to\nsay that and chew gum at the same time. [Laughter]\nEvery time I come back to Yale, I find myself almost overwhelmed\nby nostalgia. It's been SO long, and so much has happened since I first got\noff the train at the New Haven station in 1935.\nFor the first several years, I was an assistant football coach. But dur-\ning that period, I decided against a career in athletics and set my goal\nas a degree in law.\nAt that time, one of the entrance requirements to the Yale Law\nSchool was a personal interview with three distinguished members of the\nfaculty. In my case, one of them was Professor Myres McDougal, whom\nI'm delighted to see is with us tonight. It was wonderful to chat with you,\nMyres, before dinner.\nYou might be interested to know that Professor McDougal, in re-\nmarks given to the Yale Law School Association in Washington last\nyear, mentioned the fact that he still had his notes from that interview.\nHe said that under the appropriate headings there were entries like the\nfollowing: good looking, well-dressed, plenty of poise, personality-\nexcellent. Then, under another heading: informational background, not\ntoo good. [Laughter]\nWell, Professor McDougal doesn't know-or what he doesn't know is\nthat while he was keeping notes on me, I was keeping notes on him. And\nby coincidence, I just happen to have them with me here tonight. Under\nthe appropriate headings, I find entries like these: good looking, well-\ndressed, plenty of poise, personality-excellent. Then under another head-\ning: informational background about football, not so good. [Laughter]\nVolume 11-Number 17\n444\nPRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975\nAs I remember it, the only benchwarmer Professor McDougal took an in-\nterest in at that time was Oliver Wendell Holmes.\nI won't go into any more details about that interview. Suffice it to\nsay that Professor McDougal was extraordinarily impressed with my\ncapabilities and SO caught up with my capabilities and my vision of my\npotentialities that in a whirlwind of enthusiasm, he wrote: \"I see no rea-\nson why we should not take him.\" [Laughter]\nMy biggest problem at that time was convincing the school I could\ncontinue as a full-time assistant football coach and still carry on a full\nschedule in the law school. Fortunately, I was able to convince them, and\nI've always been very grateful for the help, the encouragement I consist-\nently received from such great educators as Gene Rostow, Thurman\nArnold, Jimmy James, Harry Shulman and, in particular, Myres\nMcDougal. And I thank you very much.\nMyres, all I can say is may your retirement provide you with the same\nriches of fulfillment and satisfaction your career has already brought to\nthe students of Yale. May God go with you.\nObviously, a lot has happened since I left Yale Law School in 1941.\nI practiced law. I joined the Navy. I was elected to Congress, became\nminority leader, Vice President, and now President. But no matter how\nfar I have traveled, something from Yale has always followed with me-\nand I'm not just referring to those letters from the Alumni Fund\n[laughter]-but something very special, something that adds to charac-\nter, something that clings to our character and, in time, something that\nbecomes our character.\nIt's rather hard to put feelings into words, but the motto of our school\nis, \"For God, for Country, and for Yale,\" and I think that says it all.\nThe 150th anniversary of this great law school, one of the outstand-\ning institutions of the world for the study of law, suggests better than I,\nthe subject for my remarks this evening. On May 1, we celebrate Law\nDay. Most of you in this audience have devoted your academic years and\na good part of your lives to the development and to the promulgation of\nthe law.\nToday, as President, I sense, and I think the American people sense\nthat we are facing a basic and a very serious problem of disregard for the\nlaw.\nand diseaser\nI would like to talk with you tonight about law and the spirit of abid-\nbo each other\ning by the law. I ask you to think along with me about the concern of so\nmany Americans about the problem of crime. And let us start with the\ngreat Preamble of our Constitution which seeks \"to insure domestic tran-\n11\nquility.\" Have we achieved on our streets and in our homes that sense of\ndomestic tranquility SO essential to the pursuit of happiness?\nWith the launching of our Bicentennial year, it has been argued that\nthe American Revolution was the most successful in history because the\nprinciples of the Revolution-liberty and equality under the Iaw-became\nthe functioning constitutional principles of our great Government.\nThe Founding Fathers governed well and governed prudently, with\nrestraint and respect for justice and law. There was no reign of terror, no\nrepression, no dictatorship. The institutions they have founded became\ndurable and effective. Because of all of this, we tend to think of them now\nas respectable and conservative. But the fact is that ours remains the great\nRevolution of modern history, and we should be proud of it.\nVolume 11-Number 17\nPRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975\n445\nA leading feature of the American Revolution was its devotion to\njustice under law. Once one gets past those two glorious opening para-\ngraphs, the Declaration of Independence reads very much like a legal\nbrief.\nThe argument was made that sound government and just laws had\nto be restored to the land. The theme was that independence was needed\nto restore a representative government of laws in order to secure liberty.\nOur revolutionary leaders heeded John Locke's teaching: \"Where\nthere is no law, there is no freedom.\" Law makes human society possible.\nIt pledges safety to every member so that the company of fellow human\nbeings can be a blessing instead of a threat. Where law exists and is re-\nspected and is fairly enforced, trust replaces fear.\nDo we provide that domestic tranquility which the Constitution\nseeks? If we take the crime rates as an indication, the answer has to be no.\nThe number of violent crimes rises steadily, and we have recently\nsuffered the national disgrace of lawbreaking in high places. Violent\ncrimes on our streets and in our homes make fear pervasive. They strike\nat the very roots of community life; they sever the bonds that link us as\nfellow citizens; they make citizens fear each other.\nCrime in high places, whether in the Federal Government, State gov-\nernment, local governments, or in business or in organized labor, sets an\nexample that makes it all the more difficult to foster a law-abiding spirit\namong ordinary citizens.\nAnd when we talk about obeying the law, we think of police and\ncourts and prisons and the whole apparatus of the law enforcement proc-\ness. But the truth is that most of us obey the law because we believe that\ncompliance is the right thing to do and not because the police may be\nwatching.\nAs far as law violations in high places are concerned, let me stress\nthis point: In the present Administration, I have made it a matter of the\nhighest priority to restore to the executive branch, decency, honesty, and\nadherence to the law at all levels. This has been done, and it will be con-\ntinued.\nI urge the same effort and the same dedication in State governments,\nwhere recently there have been too many scandals. I urge the same stand-\nards in local governments, also in industry and in labor. There is no way\nto inculcate in society the spirit of law if society's leaders are not scrupu-\nlously law-abiding.\nWe have seen how lawbreaking by officials can be stopped by the\nproper functioning of our basic institutions-executive, legislative, and\njudicial branches. But America has been far from successful in dealing\nwith the sort of crime that obsesses America day and night. I mean\nstreet crime, crime that invades our neighborhoods and our homes-mur-\nders, robberies, rapes, muggings, holdups, break-ins-the kind of brutal\nviolence that makes us fearful of strangers and afraid to go out at night.\nIn thinking about this problem, I do not seek vindictive punishment\nof the criminal, but protection of the innocent victim. The victims are\nmy primary concern. That is why I do not talk about law and order, and\nwhy I return to the constitutional phrase-insuring domestic tranquility.\nThe overwhelming majority of Americans obey the law willingly and\nwithout coercion, but even the most law-abiding among us are still hu-\nVolume 11-Number 17\n446\nPRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975\nman. And so it makes ordinary commonsense that we promulgate rules\nand that there be enforcement of the rules to buttress the normal inclina-\ntion of most people to obey the rules. As James Madison asked in The\nFederalist, and I quote, \"But what is government itself but the greatest\nof all reflections on human nature? If men were angels,\" said Madison,\n\"no government would be necessary.\"\nSince men and women are not angels, we must have the apparatus\nof law enforcement. Those who prey on others, especially by violence, are\nvery, very few in number. A very small percentage of the whole popula-\ntion accounts for a very large proportion of the vicious crimes committed.\nFor example, in one study of nearly 10,000 males born in 1945, it was\nfound that only 6 percent of them accounted for two-thirds of all of the\nviolent crimes committed by the entire group.\nMost serious crimes are committed by repeaters. These relatively few,\npersistent criminals who cause so much misery and fear are really the core\nof the problem. The rest of the American people have a right to protec-\ntion from their violence.\nMost of the victims of violent crime are the poor, the old, the young,\nthe disadvantaged minorities, the people who live in the most crowded\nparts of our cities, the most defenseless. These victims have a valid claim\non the rest of society for the protection and the personal safety that they\ncannot provide for themselves-in short, for domestic tranquility.\nHardly a day passes when some politician does not call for a massive\ncrackdown on crime, but the problem is infinitely more complex than that.\nSuch an approach has not proven effective in the long haul; it is not the\nAmerican style. We need a precise and effective solution.\nOne problem is that our busiest courts are overloaded. They're so\noverloaded that very few cases are actually tried. One study showed that\nin a county in Wisconsin, only 6 percent of the convictions resulted from\ncases which came to trial. According to another study, over a 3-year period\nin Manhattan, only about 3 percent of the persons indicted were convicted\nafter trial.\nI think this audience knows the explanation. It is plea bargaining—\nin many cases, plea bargaining required by the ever-growing pressure of\nan increased caseload. The popular notion that trial follows arrest is a\nmisconception in a vast majority of cases, and this audience will also be\nquick to guess one of the basic reasons.\nThe increase in arrests has been much more rapid than the increase\nin the number of judges, prosecutors, and public defenders. The most ob-\nvious response to this imbalance has been to accept pleas of guilt in return\nfor short prison terms or sentences, or no sentences at all.\nAccording to a recent authoritative report, half of the persons con-\nvicted of felonies in New York received no detention whatsoever. And of\nthe other half, only one-fifth were sentenced to more than one year of im-\nprisonment. Imprisonment, thus, too seldom follows conviction for a\nfelony.\nIn the sixties, crime rates went higher and higher, but the number\nof persons in prisons, State and Federal, actually went down. A Rand\nCorporation report of one major jurisdiction showed that of all convicted\nrobbers with a major, prior record, only 27 percent were sent to prison\nafter conviction.\nVolume 11-Number 17\nPRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975\n447\nNotice, please, that I'm speaking only of convicted felons. I am not\nchastising our system for determining guilt or innocence. I am urging that\nvirtually all of those convicted of a violent crime should be sent to prison.\nAnd this should be done especially if a gun was involved or there was other\nsubstantial danger or injury to a person or persons. There certainly should\nbe imprisonment if the convicted person has a prior record of convictions.\nMost serious offenders are repeaters. We owe it to their victims-\npast, present, and future-to get them off the streets. This is just everyday\ncommonsense, as I see it. The crime rate will go down if persons who ha-\nbitually commit most of the predatory crimes are kept in prison for a rea-\nsonable period, if convicted, because they will then not be free to commit\nmore crimes.\nConvicts should be treated humanely in prison. Loss of liberty should\nbe the chief punishment. Improvement in the treatment of, and facilities\nfor prisoners is long overdue. But it is essential that there be less delay in\nbringing arrested persons to trial, less plea bargaining, and more court-\nroom determination of guilt or innocence, and that all-or practically\nall-of those actually convicted of predatory CI ime be sent to prison.\nIn many other areas, it is the responsibility of the Federal Govern-\nment to augment the enforcement efforts of the States when it becomes\nnecessary.\nWhat else can we do? The Federal Code can be modified to make\nmore sentences mandatory and, therefore, punishment more certain for\nthose convicted of violent crimes.\nWhat can the White House do about this? The Federal role is limited,\nbecause most violent crimes are matters for State and local authorities.\nFurther, the creation of criminal sanctions and their interpretation are\nthe concerns of the legislative and judicial branches as well as the execu-\ntive branch.\nThe principal role of the Federal Government in the area of crime\ncontrol has centered in providing financial and technical assistance to the\nseveral States. However, while we are all aware that the actual control\nof crime in this country is a matter primarily of State responsibility\nunder the Constitution, there are several areas in which it is the chief\nresponsibility of the Federal Government.\nWe can provide leadership in making funds available to add judges,\nprosecutors, and public defenders to the Federal system. This Federal\nmodel should encourage States to adopt similar priorities for the use of\ntheir own funds and those provided by the Law Enforcement Assistance\nAdministration.\nWe can encourage better use of existing prison facilities to minimize\ndetention of persons convicted of minor crimes, thus making more room\nfor the convicted felons to be imprisoned. There are a number of esti-\nmates of how much the crime rate would be reduced if all convicted crim-\ninals with major records were sent to prison instead of being set free after\nconviction, as too many are today.\nAlthough we might expect the certainty of a prison sentence to serve\nas a deterrent, let us remember that one obvious effect of prison is to sep-\narate lawbreakers from the law-abiding society. In totalitarian states, it's\neasier to assure law and order. Dictators eliminate freedom of move-\nVolume 11-Number 17\n448\nPRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975\nment, of speech, and of choice. They control the news media and the edu-\ncational system. They conscript the entire society, and deprive people of\nbasic civil liberties. By such methods, crime can be strictly controlled.\nBut, in effect, the entire society becomes one huge prison. This is not a\nchoice we are willing to consider.\nEdmund Burke commented appropriately in his Reflections on the\nFrench Revolution. Burke said, and I quote, \"To make a government\nrequires no great prudence. Settle the seat of power, teach obedience, and\nthe work is done. To give freedom is still more easy. It is not necessary to\nguide; it only requires to let go the rein. But to form a free government,\nthat is, to temper together these opposite elements of liberty and re-\nstraint in one consistent work, requires much thought, deep reflection, a\nsagacious, powerful, and combining mind.\"\nSince these words were written, the world has changed profoundly.\nBut the old question still remains: Can a free people restrain crime with-\nout sacrificing fundamental liberties and a heritage of compassion?\nI am confident of the American answer. Let it become a vital element\non America's new agenda. Let us show that we can temper together those\nopposite elements of liberty and restraint into one consistent whole.\nLet us set an example for the world of a law-abiding America glory-\ning in its freedom as well as its respect for law. Let us, at last, fufill the\nconstitutional promise of domestic tranquility for all of our law-abiding\ncitizens.\nThank you very much.\nNOTE: The President spoke at 9:57 p.m. in Woolsey Hall at the Yale University Law\nSchool, New Haven, Conn.\nNow we have, in my judgment, a hard battle ahead of\nthe American people will support your enons\nas. But if you join with me, and we get the mayors and\nas we join with others.\nthe county officials to join with us, we can extend this pro-\nI think I understand the importance of State govern\ngram along the lines that I'm recommending. It's not\nment and some of the problems you face. And I can a\ngoing to be easy. You will have some people who will\nsure you that I and my Administration will do everythin\nwant to change its character, reduce its money, put all\nwe can to be helpful. It's a mutual responsibility we hav\nkinds of limitations and strings on it. We cannot afford\nto our respective constituents, and if we work togethe\nto have that happen.\nwe can get the job done.\nThis program has justified itself. We had a hard time\nThank you very, very much.\ngetting it in the first instance, and we will probably have a\nNOTE: The President spoke at 2:08 p.m. in the East Room at t\ndifficult time in the months ahead for its extension. But\nWhite House to participants in a special leadership conference 1\ning held in Washington, D.C., under the sponsorship of the N\non its merit, it can be justified. And I'm confident that\ntional Conference of State Legislatures.\nYALE UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL\nThe President's Remarks at the Sesquicentennial Convocation\nDinner. April 25, 1975\nThank you very much, President Brewster. Dean Goldstein, Governor\nGrasso, Justices Stewart and White, the Secretary of HUD, Carla Hills,\nthe Members of the House of Representatives with whom I served and\nothers who are now Members, but with whom I did not have that privi-\nlege and pleasure, good mayor, fellow alumni students, and guests of Yale\nLaw School:\nObviously, it's a very great privilege and pleasure to be here at the\nYale Law School Sesquicentennial Convocation. And I defy anyone to\nsay that and chew gum at the same time. [Laughter]\nEvery time I come back to Yale, I find myself almost overwhelmed\nby nostalgia. It's been so long, and so much has happened since I first got\noff the train at the New Haven station in 1935.\nFor the first several years, I was an assistant football coach. But dur-\ning that period, I decided against a career in athletics and set my goal\nas a degree in law.\nAt that time, one of the entrance requirements to the Yale Law\nSchool was a personal interview with three distinguished members of the\nfaculty. In my case, one of them was Professor Myres McDougal, whom\nI'm delighted to see is with us tonight. It was wonderful to chat with you,\nMyres, before dinner.\nYou might be interested to know that Professor McDougal, in re-\nmarks given to the Yale Law School Association in Washington last\nyear, mentioned the fact that he still had his notes from that interview.\nHe said that under the appropriate headings there were entries like the\nfollowing: good looking, well-dressed, plenty of poise, personality-\nexcellent. Then, under another heading: informational background, not\ntoo good. [Laughter]\nWell, Professor McDougal doesn't know-or what he doesn't know is\nthat while he was keeping notes on me, I was keeping notes on him. And\nby coincidence, I just happen to have them with me here tonight. Under\nthe appropriate headings, I find entries like these: good looking, well-\ndressed, plenty of poise, personality-excellent. Then under another head-\ning: informational background about football, not so good. [Laughter]\nVolume 11-Number 17\nGERALD\n444\nPRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD; 1975\nAs I remember it, the only benchwarmer Professor McDougal took an in-\nterest in at that time was Oliver Wendell Holmes.\nI won't go into any more details about that interview. Suffice it to\nsay that Professor McDougal was extraordinarily impressed with my\ncapabilities and so caught up with my capabilities and my vision of my\npotentialities that in a whirlwind of enthusiasm, he wrote: \"I see no rea-\nson why we should not take him.\" [Laughter]\nMy biggest problem at that time was convincing the school I could\ncontinue as a full-time assistant football coach and still carry on a full\nschedule in the law school. Fortunately, I was able to convince them, and\nI've always been very grateful for the help, the encouragement I consist-\nently received from such great educators as Gene Rostow, Thurman\nArnold, Jimmy James, Harry Shulman and, in particular, Myres\nMcDougal. And I thank you very much.\nMyres, all I can say is may your retirement provide you with the same\nriches of fulfillment and satisfaction your career has already brought to\nthe students of Yale. May God go with you.\nObviously, a lot has happened since I left Yale Law School in 1941.\nI practiced law. I joined the Navy. I was elected to Congress, became\nminority leader, Vice President, and now President. But no matter how\nfar I have traveled, something from Yale has always followed with me-\nand I'm not just referring to those letters from the Alumni Fund\n[laughter]-but something very special, something that adds to charac-\nter, something that clings to our character and, in time, something that\nbecomes our character.\nIt's rather hard to put feelings into words, but the motto of our school\nis, \"For God, for Country, and for Yale,\" and I think that says it all.\nThe 150th anniversary of this great law school, one of the outstand-\ning institutions of the world for the study of law, suggests better than I,\nthe subject for my remarks this evening. On May 1, we celebrate Law\nDay. Most of you in this audience have devoted your academic years and\na good part of your lives to the development and to the promulgation of\nthe law.\nToday, as President, I sense, and I think the American people sense\nthat we are facing a basic and a very serious problem of disregard for the\nlaw.\nI would like to talk with you tonight about law and the spirit of abid-\ning by the law. I ask you to think along with me about the concern of so\nmany Americans about the problem of crime. And let us start with the\ngreat Preamble of our Constitution which seeks \"to insure domestic tran-\nquility.\" Have we achieved on our streets and in our homes that sense of\ndomestic tranquility so essential to the pursuit of happiness?\nWith the launching of our Bicentennial year, it has been argued that\nthe American Revolution was the most successful in history because the\nprinciples of the Revolution-liberty and equality under the Iaw-became\nthe functioning constitutional principles of our great Government.\nThe Founding Fathers governed well and governed prudently, with\nrestraint and respect for justice and law. There was no reign of terror, no\nrepression, no dictatorship. The institutions they have founded became\n&\nFORD\ndurable and effective. Because of all of this, we tend to think of them now\nas respectable and conservative. But the fact is that ours remains the great\nGERALD\nRevolution of modern history, and we should be proud of it.\nVolume 11-Number 17\nPRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975\n445\nA leading feature of the American Revolution was its devotion to\njustice under law. Once one gets past those two glorious opening para-\ngraphs, the Declaration of Independence reads very much like a legal\nbrief.\nThe argument was made that sound government and just laws had\nto be restored to the land. The theme was that independence was needed\nto restore a representative government of laws in order to secure liberty.\nOur revolutionary leaders heeded John Locke's teaching: \"Where\nthere is no law, there is no freedom.\" Law makes human society possible.\nIt pledges safety to every member so that the company of fellow human\nbeings can be a blessing instead of a threat. Where law exists and is re-\nspected and is fairly enforced, trust replaces fear.\nDo we provide that domestic tranquility which the Constitution\nseeks? If we take the crime rates as an indication, the answer has to be no.\nThe number of violent crimes rises steadily, and we have recently\nsuffered the national disgrace of lawbreaking in high places. Violent\ncrimes on our streets and in our homes make fear pervasive. They strike\nat the very roots of community life; they sever the bonds that link us as\nfellow citizens; they make citizens fear each other.\nCrime in high places, whether in the Federal Government, State gov-\nernment, local governments, or in business or in organized labor, sets an\nexample that makes it all the more difficult to foster a law-abiding spirit\namong ordinary citizens.\nAnd when we talk about obeying the law, we think of police and\ncourts and prisons and the whole apparatus of the law enforcement proc-\ness. But the truth is that most of us obey the law because we believe that\ncompliance is the right thing to do and not because the police may be\nwatching.\nAs far as law violations in high places are concerned, let me stress\nthis point: In the present Administration, I have made it a matter of the\nhighest priority to restore to the executive branch, decency, honesty, and\nadherence to the law at all levels. This has been done, and it will be con-\ntinued.\nI urge the same effort and the same dedication in State governments,\nwhere recently there have been too many scandals. I urge the same stand-\nards in local governments, also in industry and in labor. There is no way\nto inculcate in society the spirit of law if society's leaders are not scrupu-\nlously law-abiding.\nWe have seen how lawbreaking by officials can be stopped by the\nproper functioning of our basic institutions-executive, legislative, and\njudicial branches. But America has been far from successful in dealing\nwith the sort of crime that obsesses America day and night. I mean\nstreet crime, crime that invades our neighborhoods and our homes-mur-\nders, robberies, rapes, muggings, holdups, break-ins-the kind of brutal\nviolence that makes us fearful of strangers and afraid to go out at night.\nIn thinking about this problem, I do not seek vindictive punishment\nof the criminal, but protection of the innocent victim. The victims are\nmy primary concern. That is why I do not talk about law and order, and\nwhy I return to the constitutional phrase-insuring domestic tranquility.\nThe overwhelming majority of Americans obey the law willingly and\nwithout coercion, but even the most law-abiding among us are still hu-\nFO\nVolume 11-Number 17\nGERALD\n446\nPRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975\nman. And so it makes ordinary commonsense that we promulgate rules\nand that there be enforcement of the rules to buttress the normal inclina-\ntion of most people to obey the rules. As James Madison asked in The\nFederalist, and I quote, \"But what is government itself but the greatest\nof all reflections on human nature? If men were angels,\" said Madison,\n\"no government would be necessary.\"\nSince men and women are not angels, we must have the apparatus\nof law enforcement. Those who prey on others, especially by violence, are\nvery, very few in number. A very small percentage of the whole popula-\ntion accounts for a very large proportion of the vicious crimes committed.\nFor example, in one study of nearly 10,000 males born in 1945, it was\nfound that only 6 percent of them accounted for two-thirds of all of the\nviolent crimes committed by the entire group.\nMost serious crimes are committed by repeaters. These relatively few,\npersistent criminals who cause so much misery and fear are really the core\nof the problem. The rest of the American people have a right to protec-\ntion from their violence.\nMost of the victims of violent crime are the poor, the old, the young,\nthe disadvantaged minorities, the people who live in the most crowded\nparts of our cities, the most defenseless. These victims have a valid claim\non the rest of society for the protection and the personal safety that they\ncannot provide for themselves-in short, for domestic tranquility.\nHardly a day passes when some politician does not call for a massive\ncrackdown on crime, but the problem is infinitely more complex than that.\nSuch an approach has not proven effective in the long haul; it is not the\nAmerican style. We need a precise and effective solution.\nOne problem is that our busiest courts are overloaded. They're so\noverloaded that very few cases are actually tried. One study showed that\nin a county in Wisconsin, only 6 percent of the convictions resulted from\ncases which came to trial. According to another study, over a 3-year period\nin Manhattan, only about 3 percent of the persons indicted were convicted\nafter trial.\nI think this audience knows the explanation. It is plea bargaining-\nin many cases, plea bargaining required by the ever-growing pressure of\nan increased caseload. The popular notion that trial follows arrest is a\nmisconception in a vast majority of cases, and this audience will also be\nquick to guess one of the basic reasons.\nThe increase in arrests has been much more rapid than the increase\nin the number of judges, prosecutors, and public defenders. The most ob-\nvious response to this imbalance has been to accept pleas of guilt in return\nfor short prison terms or sentences, or no sentences at all.\nAccording to a recent authoritative report, half of the persons con-\nvicted of felonies in New York received no detention whatsoever. And of\nthe other half, only one-fifth were sentenced to more than one year of im-\nprisonment. Imprisonment, thus, too seldom follows conviction for a\nfelony.\nIn the sixties, crime rates went higher and higher, but the number\nof persons in prisons, State and Federal, actually went down. A Rand\nCorporation report of one major jurisdiction showed that of all convicted\nrobbers with a major, prior record, only 27 percent were sent to prison\nafter conviction.\nBERALD FORD LIBRARY\nVolume 11-Number 17\nNotice, please, that I'm speaking only of convicted felons. I am not\nchastising our system for determining guilt or innocence. I am urging that\nvirtually all of those convicted of a violent crime should be sent to prison.\nAnd this should be done especially if a gun was involved or there was other\nsubstantial danger or injury to a person or persons. There certainly should\nbe imprisonment if the convicted person has a prior record of convictions.\nMost serious offenders are repeaters. We owe it to their victims-\npast, present, and future-to get them off the streets. This is just everyday\ncommonsense, as I see it. The crime rate will go down if persons who ha-\nbitually commit most of the predatory crimes are kept in prison for a rea-\nsonable period, if convicted, because they will then not be free to commit\nmore crimes.\nConvicts should be treated humanely in prison. Loss of liberty should\nbe the chief punishment. Improvement in the treatment of, and facilities\nfor prisoners is long overdue. But it is essential that there be less delay in\nbringing arrested persons to trial, less plea bargaining, and more court-\nroom determination of guilt or innocence, and that all-or practically\nall-of those actually convicted of predatory crime be sent to prison.\nIn many other areas, it is the responsibility of the Federal Govern-\nment to augment the enforcement efforts of the States when it becomes\nnecessary.\nWhat else can we do? The Federal Code can be modified to make\nmore sentences mandatory and, therefore, punishment more certain for\nthose convicted of violent crimes.\nWhat can the White House do about this? The Federal role is limited,\nbecause most violent crimes are matters for State and local authorities.\nFurther, the creation of criminal sanctions and their interpretation are\nthe concerns of the legislative and judicial branches as well as the execu-\ntive branch.\nThe principal role of the Federal Government in the area of crime\ncontrol has centered in providing financial and technical assistance to the\nseveral States. However, while we are all aware that the actual control\nof crime in this country is a matter primarily of State responsibility\nunder the Constitution, there are several areas in which it is the chief\nresponsibility of the Federal Government.\nWe can provide leadership in making funds available to add judges,\nprosecutors, and public defenders to the Federal system. This Federal\nmodel should encourage States to adopt similar priorities for the use of\ntheir own funds and those provided by the Law Enforcement Assistance\nAdministration.\nWe can encourage better use of existing prison facilities to minimize\ndetention of persons convicted of minor crimes, thus making more room\nfor the convicted felons to be imprisoned. There are a number of esti-\nmates of how much the crime rate would be reduced if all convicted crim-\ninals with major records were sent to prison instead of being set free after\nconviction, as too many are today.\nAlthough we might expect the certainty of a prison sentence to serve\nas a deterrent, let us remember that one obvious effect of prison is to sep-\narate lawbreakers from the law-abiding society. In totalitarian states, it's\neasier to assure law and order. Dictators eliminate freedom of move-\nis\nFORD\nVolume 11-Number 17\nGERALD\n443\nPRESIDENTIAL DOCUMENTS: GERALD R. FORD, 1975\nment, of speech, and of choice. They control the news media and the edu-\ncational system. They conscript the entire society, and deprive people of\nbasic civil liberties. By such methods, crime can be strictly controlled.\nBut, in effect, the entire society becomes one huge prison. This is not a\nchoice we are willing to consider.\nEdmund Burke commented appropriately in his Reflections on the\nFrench Revolution. Burke said, and I quote, \"To make a government\nrequires no great prudence. Settle the seat of power, teach obedience, and\nthe work is done. To give freedom is still more easy. It is not necessary to\nguide; it only requires to let go the rein. But to form a free government,\nthat is, to temper together these opposite elements of liberty and re-\nstraint in one consistent work, requires much thought, deep reflection, a\nsagacious, powerful, and combining mind.\"\nSince these words were written, the world has changed profoundly.\nBut the old question still remains: Can a free people restrain crime with-\nout sacrificing fundamental liberties and a heritage of compassion?\nI am confident of the American answer. Let it become a vital element\non America's new agenda. Let us show that we can temper together those\nopposite elements of liberty and restraint into one consistent whole.\nLet us set an example for the world of a law-abiding America glory-\ning in its freedom as well as its respect for law. Let us, at last, fufill the\nconstitutional promise of domestic tranquility for all of our law-abiding\ncitizens.\nThank you very much.\nNOTE: The President spoke at 9:57 p.m. in Woolsey Hall at the Yale University Law\nSchool, New Haven, Conn.\n&\nFORD\nGERALD\nJune 5, 1975\nTO:\nDICK PARSONS\nFROM:\nJIM CANNON\nSUBJECT:\nCRIME MESSAGE Dave\nHere are Don Rumsfeld's thoughts on what the crime\nmessage should accomplish:\n1. It is the basic message he will want to\nlive with from now until November of 1976.\n2. It should show:\na. He gives a damn about what's happening\nin the country.\nb. He cares about the victims of crime.\nC. He has proposed an anti-crime program to\nCongress.\nd. Congress won't pass it.\n3. The message should be thoughtful and lasting,\nhave a broad appeal, and be slightly right of\ncenter.\nJMC:jm\n[6/13/75]\nSwate\nSoll Butz,\nwondring\nDonostr Comul meety\nVenemen\nA\nHe and At\nwet ar VXX\nJoB S\nareau\nGreats\nw\n[6/13/75]\n/\nHealthing of D.C. verew group\nmext wednesday V,P,\n2\nbeen Coutrol\nout\non one provider\nRee Gun Control\nrole Mr or a\nSun Owlen\n\\\nsale delivery -\nweres coral N not\nlaw\nwe shouldnt enfore\nloral law\nplayent Federal can\nwoher it illegat\nto seel a\nsun if illesal\nwas Fed a\nstate law -\nRequire dealeR to\nDoug\nwartin\nthe Helpy to details\nThat x would\nS. Cannon\nTHE WHITE HOUSE\nWASHINGTON\nJune 13, 1975\nMEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT\nFROM:\nJim Cannon\nSUBJECT:\nCrime Message\nAttached for your consideration is the final draft of your special message\nto the Congress on crime. The following matters remain unresolved:\nI.\nCompensation to Victims of Crime\nIssue: Should the Crime Message specifically endorse\nthe victims' compensation provision of S. 1?\nDiscussion:\nBased on 1973 data, the Department of Justice has estimated that\nrevenues for a victims' compensation fund, such as would be\nestablished by S. 1, would approximate $15. 4 million annually,\nand that pay-outs to victims of crimes would approximate\n$7. 6 million annually, not including compensation for lost earnings\ndue to disability. The Department indicates that, while it is\nimpossible to determine the potential liability for lost earnings\ndue to disability, the remaining revenues available to the fund\nshould be sufficient to cover all such liability. The Department's\nanalysis is attached at Tab A.\nOMB has expressed concern that the Department's estimate may\nunderstate, by a wide margin, the number of potential claimants\nfor compensation, since:\na) it is based on reported crime which, itself, understates\nthe level of actual crime by as much as 300 to 500 per\ncent; and\nb) it does not take into account cases commenced in State\ncourts which involve a Federal crime (i. e., concurrent\njurisdiction cases).\n2\nOMB also questions the Department's estimate regarding revenues\navailable to the victims' compensation fund, since the year upon\nwhich the Department's estimate is based, 1973, was a year of\nunusually high criminal fine collections. The OMB analysis is\nattached at Tab B.\nMembers of my staff have canvassed the several States which have\nenacted victims' compensation programs to ascertain how such\nprograms work on the State level. Most States feel that their\nvictims' compensation programs are working well. They indicate\nthat these programs assist law enforcement authorities in eliciting\nthe victim's assistance in the criminal investigatory and adjudicatory\nprocesses. In almost every State, the number of claims filed and\nthe total cost of the program are much lower than originally\nanticipated. A more detailed analysis of State victims' compensa-\ntion programs is attached at Tab C.\nRecommendations:\nThe Attorney General, the Counsel to the President and I recommend\nthat you specifically endorse the victims' compensation concept in\nthe Crime Message.\nOMB, Jack Marsh, Bob Goldwin and Max Friedersdorf have\nrecommended that you reserve judgment on this matter.\nMax reports that there is no clear-cut Congressional view on this\nissue.\nExpressly Endorse\nReserve Judgment\nII.\nGun Control\nIssue: How large an increase in ATF investigatory\npersonnel should you propose in the Crime\nMessage?\nDiscussion:\nYou earlier indicated your desire to have the Bureau of Alcohol,\nTobacco and Firearms substantially increase its enforcement\nactivities in the nation's ten largest metropolitan areas. ATF\nproposes to increase its present field staff by approximately\n3\n1,000 additional firearms investigators and 500 additional\nsupporting personnel, at a cost of $46. 7 million annually.\nThese additional investigators would concentrate on two major\nproblems: tracing all firearms involved in crime, and intensifying\nefforts to disarm and convict significant weapons offenders.\nRecommendations:\nOMB recommends a more limited approach until the value of the\nintensified program can be demonstrated. Specifically, OMB\nrecommends doubling existing firearms investigators in the nation's\nten largest cities. This would result in 364 additional firearms\ninvestigators and 195 additional supporting personnel, at a cost of\n$16. 6 million annually.\nThe Counsel to the President and I recommend that you direct\nATF to employ and train an additional 500 firearms investigators\n(necessitating 250 additional support personnel), at an approximate\ncost of $23. 3 million annually.\n364\n500\n1,000\nAdditionally, Bob Goldwin has objected to several of the exculpatory\nprovisions regarding the imposition of mandatory sentences. Under\nyour proposal, a judge could avoid imposing a mandatory sentence if\nhe found and specified in writing one or more of the following: that\nthe defendant was under 18, or was mentally impaired, or was\nacting under substantial duress, or was implicated in a crime\nactually committed by others and participated in the crime only in\na very minor way.\nBob argues that, since substantial numbers of violent crimes are\ncommitted by persons under 18, your proposal should be modified\nto require the imposition of a mandatory sentence for persons\n16 years of age or older, Furthermore, Bob believes that the\nterms \"mentally impaired\" and \"substantial duress\" are vague\nand may provide lenient judges with a convenient reason for not\nimposing a jail sentence. He recommends that these provisions\nbe dropped.\n4\nThe Attorney General takes strong exception to Bob's recommenda-\ntions. He points out that few persons under age 18 commit Federal\ncrimes. Therefore, lowering to 16 the age at which a person\nbecomes subject to mandatory imprisonment is not very meaningful\nat the Federal level. Further, to the extent that there are\n16- and 17-year-old Federal offenders, special facilities would\nhave to be constructed to house them, because the Juvenile Justice\nand Delinquency Prevention Act prohibits their being comingled\nwith adult offenders. (Placement of these offenders in existing\nFederal Youth Facilities would not be lawful, since those facilities\nhouse persons up to 25 years of age). The Attorney General also\npoints out that the terms \"mentally impaired\" and \"substantial\nduress\" have meaning to the legal community and are necessary\nto the successful implementation of a mandatory sentencing scheme.\nTherefore, he recommends that your proposal be left intact.\nThe Counsel to the President and I concur in the Attorney General's\nrecommendation.\nLeave Intact\nChange per Bob Goldwin's Suggestion\nMemorandum\nTO\n:\nRonald Gainer\nDATE: May 30, 1975\nDeputy Director, OPP\nFROM :\nEdward D. Jones, III\nOffice of Policy and Planning\nSUBJECT:\nCost Analysis of S. 1 -- Victim Compensation Fund\nIntroduction and Summary\nThis memorandum presents estimates of the expected\nrevenues and dollar claims of the Victim Compensation Fund\noutlined in S. 1. The fund mechanism is complex, and the\ndata available for evaluating its cost-effectiveness\nlimited. As a result, the estimates derived below are\nbased upon several critical assumptions, and, thus, should\nbe used with caution.\nBased upon 1973 data, anticipated revenues of the Fund\nare approximately $15.4 million, and anticipated payouts\n$7.6 million. The payout figure does not include compen-\nsation for lost earnings due to disability because that\ncomponent was impossible to determine. Nevertheless, it\nappears that the revenues going into the Fund are sufficient\nto cover disability compensation, additional victims,\nunusually high medical claims, and administrative expenses.\nRevenues\nThe Victim Compensation Fund relies for revenues upon\n(a) criminal fines collected in United States courts and\nby the Attorney General, (b) twenty percent of the net\nprofits of Federal Prison Industries, and (c) public or\nprivate donations. Donations to the Fund will likely be\nminimal, and are thus assumed to be non-existent for the\npurpose of this analysis.\nCriminal fines collected in FY 1973 in all judicial\ndistricts were $14,034,546. 1/ Under the provisions of S. 1,\n1/ Executive Office of the United States Attorneys, Statistical\nYearbook, Fiscal Year 1973, Table 5.\nBuy U.S. Savings Bonds Regularly on the Payroll Savings Plan\n-2--\nthe level of fines are significantly increased for criminal\noffenses. Moreover, collection procedures will be enhanced.\nTherefore, it is likely that fines available to the Fund\nwill increase markedly. This is, of course, dependent upon\njudicial discretion regarding the assessment of higher fines.\nTotal net profits of Federal Prison Industries in\nFY 1973 were $6,610,151. 2/ Twenty percent, or $1,322,030,\nwould be available to the Victim Compensation Fund under\nS. 1 provisions. Federal Prison Industries under S. 1 will\nhave greater access to compete with private industry. Thus,\nit is likely that net profits -- and, hence, the contribution\nto the Fund -- will increase, although the extent of such\nincreases are uncertain.\nA conservative estimate of revenues of the Fund, based\nupon FY 1973 data, is $15,356,576.\nCompensation\nClaimants eligible for compensation from the Fund are\nvictims of federal jurisdiction offenses who sustain personal\ninjury. In the event of death, the victims' survivors may be\ncompensated. Bodily injury and ensuing losses are covered\nup to a maximum of $50,000. 3/ However, compensation by the\nFund is secondary to all other sources.\nAssaultive offenses 5/ commenced in United States District\nCourts in FY 1973 were:\nHomicide\n144\nAssault\n695\nSex Offenses\n180\n2/ Federal Prison Industries Financial and Operating Report,\nFY 1974, p. 2.\n3/ The Fund may compensate for the actual pecuniary loss of\nthe claimant, and loss of earnings if disability extends longer\nthan 90 days.\n4/ This is not reflected in the estimates below. Consequently,\nthose estimates overstate expected compensation from the Fund.\n5/ Data from Administrative Office of U.S. Courts, Annual\nReport of the Director, 1974, Table D2. Potential assaultive\nviolence in the 98 kidnapping cases commenced in FY 1973 cannot\nbe determined. Consequently, this offense is not analyzed.\n-3-\nThe homicide figure is probably an accurate indicator of\nvictimization for this crime. A comparison of Uniform Crime\nReports (UCR) incident data and National Crime Panel (NCP)\nvictimization data indicates for 1973 consistent crime rates\nfor rape. 6/ Thus, the sex offense rate above is a good\napproximation of victimization for this crime. Unfortunately,\na similar comparison indicates that the figure for assault is\na poor estimator, likely understating dramatically victimi-\nzations occurring in federal jurisdiction. 7/ Consequently,\nthis figure is adjusted upward by a factor of 2.6. Thus,\nthe number of anticipated claimants by assaultive crime type\nfor the analysis are:\nHomicide 144\nAssault\n1807\nSex Offerses 180\nThe present value of the expected lifetime earnings\nforegone by the average homicide victim in 1972 was $99,036.\nThis exceeds the maximum permissible compensation to a victim's\nsurviving dependent by $49,036. Therefore, it is assumed that\nthe dependents of the 144 homicide victims would receive the\nmaximum $50,000, totalling $7,200,000.\nBased upon National Crime Panel Survey data, the average\nrape victim incurred medical expenses of $120.52. Furthermore,\nless than five percent of the survey respondents indicated\nreceipt of compensation for expenses incurred. Therefore, it\nis assumed that the 180 sex offense victims would be compen-\nsated approximately $21,700 for medical expenses.\nAgain, based upon National Crime Panel Survey data, the\naverage victim of serious assault incurred medical expenses of\n6/ Federal Bureau of Investigation, Uniform Crime Reports\nfor the United States, 1973, pp. 11-13; Law Enforcement\nAssistance Administration, Criminal Victimization in the\nUnited States, January-June 1973, Table 1. The UCR rate incident for\nrape is 47 per 100,000 females in 1973; the NCP victimization rate\nis 50 per 100,000 females for the first half of 1973.\n7/ The UCR incident rate for aggravated assault is 198 per\n100,000 persons; the NCP victimization rate is 510 per 100,000\npersons, 2.6 times higher than the UCR rate.\n-4-\n$224.57. Only about seven percent of the Survey respondents\nindicated receipt of compensation for expenses incurred.\nTherefore, it is assumed that the 1807 victims of assault\nwould be compensated approximately $405,800.\nFor sex offenses and assault, disability loss of income\ncould not be calculated. Excluding disability, the compen-\nsation totals for the three crimes above total $7,627,500:\nThis represents about 54% of estimated revenues. The remaining\n46% of revenues should be sufficient to cover disability\ncompensation, additional victims, unusually high medical\nclaims, and administrative expenses.\nB\nCompensation to Victims of Crime\nOMB Analysis\nThe Department estimates that revenues for the\nVictim Compensation Fund would approximate $15.4\nmillion annually, derived from (a) criminal fines\ncollected in U.S. Courts and by the Attorney\nGeneral and (b) twenty percent of the net profits\nof Federal Prison Industries. They estimate that\ndisbursements will come close to utilizing the\nfull amount of the Fund. The Department points\nout that revenues to the Fund will grow if\nincreases in criminal fines proposed by the\nPresident are approved.\nThe Department's calculations for disbursements\nunder the Fund are based on assaultive offenses\ncases commenced in U.S. District Courts in 1973,\nadjusted by LEAA's recent victimization survey\nto account for unreported crimes. (The\nDepartment's analysis at Tab D indicates that\nthe data for evaluating this program are limited\nand should be used with caution.) These offenses\nare priced as follows:\nAdjusted for\nNo. of\nUnreported\nXs expected\nCases\nCrime\nTotal\nPayments\nTotal\nHomicide\n144\n--\n144\n$ 50,000\n7,200,000\n(maximum\npayments\nto\nbeneficiaries)\nAssault\n695\n1,112\n1,807\n$224.57\n405,800\n(average\nmedical\nexpenses)\nSex Offenses\n180\n--\n180\n$120.52\n21,700\n(average\nmedical\nexpenses)\n1,019\n1,112\n2,131\n$7,627,500*\n*Excludes disability compensation, which could be sizeable.\nThe Department believes that cases commenced in\nU.S. Courts are the best available measure of the\nextent of Federal crime violations likely to result\nin physical injury. Cases commenced includes:\nproceedings commenced by indictments, information\nwith indictment waived, information - other, cases\nremoved from state courts, juvenile delinquency\nproceedings, and all other proceedings. Of the\n40,367 Federal cases commenced in 1973, 1,019 were\nclassified as assaultive violence cases resulting\nin personal injury. Based on data supplied by the\nExecutive Office of U.S. Attorneys, cases commenced\nfor assaultive violence crimes parallels very\nclosely with \"matters received, which includes\ncases developed by Federal investigative agencies,\ndirect reports by victims to U.S. Attorneys, and\ncases referred by state and local police as being\nprimarily Federal violations. From this data, the\nDepartment concludes that \"cases commenced\" fairly\nwell covers the extent of assaultive violence crimes\nthat come to the attention of Federal authorities.\nEven though the national crime rate has increased\ndramatically since 1973 in almost all categories,\nthe Department's projections indicate that Federal\nassaultive violence cases have remained about\nconstant. Big increases have occurred in state\nand local assaultive crimes.\nOMB is concerned that the data used in the Department's\ntabulations may understate--by a wide margin--the number\nof potential claimants for compensation. For example:\n\"cases commenced\" deals only with reported crime.\nAs LEAA's recent victimization study revealed,\nunreported crime may be as much as 300-500 per-\ncent greater. Reported crime may increase\ndramatically with the advent of compensation.\nThere is presently no data available to\nindicate the extent of non-reported Federal\ncrime violations.\nThe Department did adjust commenced cases for the\nassault category by a factor of 2.6 (we have no\nbasis to determine the adequacy of this adjustment)\nto accommodate unreported crimes in that area, but\nmade no adjustment for homicides or sex offenses.\nWe have no basis to challenge the homicide rate\nassumption, but we do question the assumption that\ncommenced cases for sex offenses is an accurate\nmeasure of victimization, in view of the charge\nthat 4 to 10 rapes are unreported for every\none that is reported.\nThe Department' data does not take into\naccount potential dompensation claimants\nof concurrent jurisdiction cases tried in\nstate courts. There is no data to determine\nthe impact of this omission, but the\nDepartment believes that the number of\nphysical injury cases would not be large.\nOMB also has questions about the Department's\nprojections for revenues available to the Compensation\nFund. As the following table indicates, fiscal 1973\n(the base projected by the Department) was an unusually\nhigh year for criminal fine collections:\nFiscal Year\nCriminal Fines Collected\n1974\n12,179,797\n1973\n14,034,546\n1972\n12,801,716\nThe Department assumes that revenues to the Fund will\ngrow if increases in criminal fines being proposed by\nthe President are approved and imposed by the Courts.\nThe Department's proposal also assumes that 20 percent\nof the dividends from Federal Prison Industries will\nbe devoted to the Compensation Fund. Presently, these\ndividends are used for educational and vocational\nprograms at Federal prisons. Use of the dividends\nfor other purposes would reduce the level of programs\npresently being funded or create a need for new\nappropriations to avoid cutbacks.\nOMB is concerned that the Department's estimate of\nabout $15 million may significantly understate the\nnumber and size of potential compensation payments\nIf compensation generates additional reporting of\ncrime, and if there are significant numbers of\nclaimants from concurrent jurisdiction crimes,\npotential claimants may be many times greater\nthan the Department's projections.\nBudget\nIncreases\nHowever, data presently available is insufficient\nto determine the impact of this program with any\nreal precision.\n?\nBRD points out that the proposal to direct criminal\nfines into the Compensation Fund violates OMB policy\nagainst earmarking of General Fund receipts. Annual\ndisbursements from the Fund would increase the budget\ndeficit by a like amount because those receipts would\nno longer be available to finance regular government\noperations. In accordance with Section 401 of the\nCongressional Budget Act (P.L. 93-344), provision\nshould be made in proposed implementing legislation\nto make the fund available only in such amounts as\nare provided in appropriation acts. Otherwise,\nthe legislation might be rejected out of hand\nbecause it would constitute backdoor financing.\nState Victims¹ Compensation Programs\nNationally, there are twelve States (Alaska, California, Delaware,\nHawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New\nJersey, New York and Washington) that provide for compensation to\nvictims of crimes. Seven other States (Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,\nNorth Dakota, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Wisconsin) are actively\nconsidering adoption of a crime victims' compensation scheme.\nVirtually all of these programs operate on a \"last resort\" basis, pursuant\nto which victims' compensation benefits are secondary to most other forms\nof available, privately secured financial assistance. Some States limit\nbenefits to persons who meet a financial need test. These States incur\nmuch higher administrative costs than do those States which employ no\nfinancial need test.\nMost States feel that their crime victims' compensation programs are\nworking well. They indicate that these programs assist law enforcement\nauthorities in eliciting victims' assistance in the criminal investigation\nprocess. The general experience of the States is that about two out of\nevery three claims result in a pay-out. In almost every State, however,\nthe number of claims filed and the total cost of the program are much less\nthan originally anticipated.\nAttached is a chart which identifies essential elements of existing State\nprograms.\nState Victims' Compensation Programs\nEstimated\nEstimated\nYear\nMaximum\n1975\nLimitation on\nFY 1975\nState\nEnacted\nAdministrative Mechanism\nBeneficiaries\nBenefit\nCaseload\nRight of Recovery\nBudget\nAlaska\n1973\nViolent Crimes\nVictim and\n**\nCompensation Board\nDependents\n$10,000\n110\nNone\n$ 175,000\n$10,000 Med.\nVictim and\n$10,000 Wage\nCalifornia\n1966\nState Board of Control\nDependents\n$ 3,000 Rehab.\n6,500\nFinancial Need\n$4-6 Million\nVictim,\n$10,000 plus\nViolent Crimes\nDependents\n15% Lawyers\nDelaware\n1974\nCompensation Board\nand Others\nFee\n100\nNone\n$ 125,000\nCriminal Injuries\nVictim, Dependents\nHawaii\n1967\nCompensation Commission\nand Others\n$10,000\n125\nNone\n$ 175,000\nVictim and\nIllinois\n1973\nCourt of Claims\nDependents\n$10,000\n1,200\nNone\n$ 650,000\nCriminal Injuries\nVictim, Dependents\nMaryland\n1968\nCompensation Board\nand Others\n$45,000\n600\nFinancial Need\n$1,500,000\nVictim and\nMassachusetts\n1968\nDistrict Court\nDependents\n$10,000\n400\nNone\n$ 650,000\nCrime Victims\nVictim, Dependents\nMinnesota\n1974\nReparations Board\nand Others\n$10,000\n200\nNone\n$ 100,000\n*\nVictim, Dependents\nNevada\n1969\nState Board of Examiners\nand Others\n$ 5,000\n30\nFinancial Need\n$ 25,000\nViolent Crimes\nVictim, Dependents\nNew Jersey\n1971\nCompensation Board\nand Others\n$10,000\n2,000\nNone\n$1,000,000\nCrime Victims\nVictim, Dependents\nUnlimited Med.\nNew York\n1966\nCompensation Board\nand Others\n$15,000 Wage\n2,400\nFinancial Need\n$3,000,000\nCrime Victims Compensation\nDivision of Department of\nVictim and\n***\nWashington\n1973\nLabor and Industries\nDependents\nNone\n600\nNone\n$ 900,000\n*\nNevada's law only compensates those injured as a result of a \"good samaritan\" act, such as coming to the aid of a police\nofficer in trouble.\n**\nBill to provide for others has been passed by Legislature and is awaiting Governor's signature.\nThis estimate covers both the 1975 and 1976 Fiscal Years."
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