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Word: bennett (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Last week, Bennett, who may be the best penologist in U.S. history, retired from a career that he began in 1927 as an obscure Government efficiency expert investigating federal prisons. What he found was 19 scandal-tainted Siberias jammed with idle, desperate cons and untrained, underpaid guards. Bennett's reports led in 1930 to creation of the Justice Department's Bureau of Prisons, which he took over in 1937. A measure of his devotion is eight pioneering federal penal laws with which he has been associated, including the 1964 Criminal Justice Act financing legal aid for federal defendants...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Prisons: Paroling the Warden | 9/4/1964 | See Source »

Tumbling Walls. "The purpose of prison," says Bennett, "is to transform unhealthy attitudes into healthy ones." To that end, Bennett cut the work week of federal prison personnel from 60 hours to 40, raised average pay from $1,680 a year to $6,000. Armed guards are giving way to a higher proportion of specialists in remedial reading and vocational training. Overcrowding has ended with 14 new institutions, including camps and reformatories. Last year Bennett closed grim, antique Alcatraz, replacing it with a far more efficient installation in Marion, III., which embodies the best in prison architecture, a subject...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Prisons: Paroling the Warden | 9/4/1964 | See Source »

...When Bennett arrived, all federal prisoners were being tossed combustibly together, murderers and rapists with income tax evaders and car thieves, and lock-stepped to meals that were eaten from a tin plate under a guard's glare. Bennett's monument is "individualized" treatment that separates prisoners by degrees of dangerousness and redeemability. The vast majority are given only as much restraint as they require. Today, more than 40% of federal prisoners are in prisons virtually without walls-working outside at everything from roadbuilding to reforestation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Prisons: Paroling the Warden | 9/4/1964 | See Source »

Home Leave? One result is the Bennett-invented Federal Prisons Industries Inc., which does a $40 million a year business with other Government agencies and turns a $4,000,000 annual profit over to the Treasury. Another Bennett innovation is saner sentencing. In the old days, all federal sentences were for fixed periods, and a parole board could not even consider a case until one-third of a convict's term had elapsed. Bennett inspired the 1958 Omnibus Sentencing Act, which allows far greater parole flexibility and permits a judge to jail a man for three to six months...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Prisons: Paroling the Warden | 9/4/1964 | See Source »

...Bennett is now pushing for a law that would allow some prisoners to leave jail during the day to work and see their families (similar to systems long used in other countries, notably Sweden). On the other hand, Bennett's tolerance stops at the death penalty. Unlike other reformers, he wants it kept on the books for particularly heinous crimes, such as high treason, murder for hire and airplane bombings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Prisons: Paroling the Warden | 9/4/1964 | See Source »

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