As Violent Crime Skyrockets Pima County Plans To Set More Criminals Free

Estimated Reading Time: 2 minutes

Violent crime is skyrocketing in Pima County, but officials are too busy planning to release lawbreakers onto the streets to actually do anything about it.

With the county jail falling into disrepair, the Pima County Board of Supervisors’ grand solution is to establish a commission that will study how officials can reduce the facility’s population — i.e. by setting criminals free. “There are too many people in the jail,” Supervisor Matt Heinz has said, suggesting the county should aim to cut the detention center’s population in half by 2030.

It couldn’t be happening at a worse time. In 2023, Tucson police reported a 75% spike in violent crime, with aggravated assaults rising 88 percent, homicides rising 107%, and sexual assaults rising a whopping 188%. In fact, violent crime rates in Tucson are 95% higher than the national average, the latest statistics show, making Tucson more dangerous than all but 8% percent of U.S. cities.

Knowing all of this, elected officials are still siding with criminals over law-abiding constituents, effectively doubling down on the policies that put Tucson in this position in the first place.

One possible reason for this decision? That would be money. A report last year from the Goldwater Institute, where I work, revealed Pima County has raked in nearly $4 million from the left-leaning MacArthur Foundation, contingent on the county working to reduce its jail population. If incarcerations were decreasing because crime was decreasing, that would be laudable. But county officials want to reduce the incarcerated population by simply ignoring crimes and letting those culpable back on the street, no matter the consequences.

The county is selling out to leftwing special interests—trading its citizens’ safety for money. Compounding the problem, county prosecutors seem unable — or unwilling —to meet the justice standards set forth by the state by resolving cases within a reasonable timeframe. The Arizona Judicial Branch says that “justice delayed is justice denied” — yet while Arizona case processing standards say 65% of cases should be resolved within three months, just 11% were resolved in Pima County within that timeframe in 2022 (the last year for which statistics are available). Similarly, state standards say 85% of cases should be resolved within six months and 96% within a year, but in 2022, Pima County only resolved 38% of cases within six months and 73% within a year.

Pima County Attorney Laura Conover has said from day one that she wanted to “revolutionize” operations at the county attorney’s office. And Conover, who was recently forced into a mandatory diversion program by the Arizona State Bar amid allegations of unethical behavior, has certainly done that, using “prosecutorial discretion” as an excuse not to enforce the laws voters entrusted her with upholding. The result: criminals go free, leaving law-abiding citizens to fend for themselves.

By all objective standards, Pima County’s criminal justice system is a complete failure. County prosecutors are unable to resolve cases at a proper rate to meet the justice standards set forth by the state. Meanwhile, the Pima County Board of Supervisors wants to put criminals back on the streets when Tucson is already more dangerous than 92% of the cities in America.

Sadly, Pima County officials seemingly have no intention of changing the way things operate, leaving the citizens of Old Pueblo to wonder who their public servants really work for.

*****

This article was published by The Goldwater Institute and is reproduced with permission.

TAKE ACTION

The Prickly Pear’s TAKE ACTION focus this year is to help achieve a winning 2024 national and state November 5th election with the removal of the Biden/Obama leftist executive branch disaster, win one U.S. Senate seat, maintain and win strong majorities in all Arizona state offices on the ballot and to insure that unrestricted abortion is not constitutionally embedded in our laws and culture.

Please click the TAKE ACTION link to learn to do’s and don’ts for voting in 2024. Our state and national elections are at great risk from the very aggressive and radical leftist Democrat operatives with documented rigging, mail-in voter fraud and illegals voting across the country (yes, with illegals voting across the country) in the last several election cycles.

Read Part 1 and Part 2 of The Prickly Pear essays entitled How NOT to Vote in the November 5, 2024 Election in Arizona to be well informed of the above issues and to vote in a way to ensure the most likely chance your vote will be counted and counted as you intend.

Please click the following link to learn more.

TAKE ACTION
Print Friendly, PDF & Email
COPYRIGHT © 2024 PRICKLY PEAR COMMUNICATIONS, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.