Sunday, 10 February 2008

us prisoners does crime run in family



US Prisoners - Does Crime Run In The Family?

Thanks to Mike at Corr Sentencing for this interesting article about

how multigenerational crime may be even more prevalent than we

imagined.

ANGOLA, La. -- The fates of the three Caston brothers may well have

been fixed at their births.

Obsessed with the lore of the outlaw James Gang, James "Tokie" Caston

decided that his first two boys would bear the names of his heroes:

Jesse and Frank James. By the time the third son, Sonny, arrived in

1967, the boys' futures were clear. At an early age, Frank Caston

recalls, most people in tiny Lake Providence, La., referred to the

brothers not as the Castons, but as the "James Gang."

"To be named after the worst outlaw in the country, I think you put a

stamp on a person," says Jesse James Caston, 42, who was on the FBI's

10 Most Wanted list in 2000. "We never had a chance."

Their names were symbolic of a troubled upbringing that Jesse and

Frank Caston say was marked by abuse and neglect. Today, all three

brothers are convicted killers serving life sentences at Louisiana's

state prison.

Their story is extraordinary but emblematic of what social scientists

and law enforcement officials see as an increasingly complex and

persistent problem: people who become criminals in part because of the

influence of family members.

Nearly half of the 2 million inmates in state prisons across the USA

-- 48% -- say they have relatives who also have been incarcerated,

according to a Justice Department report in 2004, the most recent

comprehensive survey of state prison populations.

The portion of those reporting the detention of fathers, mothers,

brothers, sisters, spouses and children has kept pace with the

national prison population as it has increased during the past decade.

In 1997, 48% of state prisoners also reported that family members had

been to prison, according to a Justice Department analysis for USA


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