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Tim Holden on Crime

Democratic Representative (PA-17)


Voted YES on expanding services for offendors' re-entry into society.

H.R.1593: Second Chance Act of 2007: Community Safety Through Recidivism Prevention or the Second Chance Act (Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass). To reauthorize the grant program for reentry of offenders into the community in the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, and to improve reentry planning and implementation.

Proponents support voting YES because:

Rep. CONYERS: Some 650,000 men and women are leaving the Federal and State prisons each year. While the vast majority of the prisoners are committed to abiding by the law and becoming productive members of society, they often encounter the same pressures & temptations that they faced before prison. More than two-thirds of them are arrested for new crimes within 3 years of their release. This exacts a terrible cost in financial terms as well as in human terms. The Second Chance Act will help provide these men and women with the training, counseling and other support needed to help them obtain & hold steady jobs; to kick their drug and alcohol habits; rebuild their families; and deal with the many other challenges that they face in their efforts to successfully rejoin society.

Opponents recommend voting NO because:

Rep. GOHMERT: The programs that are sought to be renewed are ones we don't have information on how successful they were. I can tell you from my days as a judge, there was some anecdotal evidence that it looked like faith-based programs did a better job of dramatically reducing recidivism. In addition:

Reference: Second Chance Act; Bill HR1593 ; vote number 2007-1083 on Nov 13, 2007

Voted NO on funding for alternative sentencing instead of more prisons.

Vote on an amendment that would reduce the funding for violent offender imprisonment by and truth-in-sentencing programs by $61 million. The measure would increase funding for Boys and Girls Clubs and drug courts by the same amount.
Reference: Amendment sponsored by Scott, D-VA; Bill HR 4690 ; vote number 2000-317 on Jun 22, 2000

Voted YES on more prosecution and sentencing for juvenile crime.

Vote to pass a bill to appropriate $1.5 billion to all of the states that want to improve their juvenile justice operations. Among other provisions this bill includes funding for development, implementation, and administration of graduated sanctions for juvenile offenders, funds for building, expanding, or renovating juvenile corrections facilities, hiring juvenile judges, probation officers, and additional prosecutors for juvenile cases.
Reference: Bill introduced by McCollum, R-FL; Bill HR 1501 ; vote number 1999-233 on Jun 17, 1999

Voted NO on maintaining right of habeas corpus in Death Penalty Appeals.

Vote on an amendment to delete provisions in the bill that would make it harder for prisoners who have been given the death penalty in state courts to appeal the decision on constitutional grounds in the federal courts ['Habeas Corpus'].
Bill HR 2703 ; vote number 1996-64 on Mar 14, 1996

Voted YES on making federal death penalty appeals harder.

Vote on a bill to make it harder for prisoners who have been given the death penalty in state courts to appeal the decision on constitutional grounds in the federal courts.
Bill HR 729 ; vote number 1995-109 on Feb 8, 1995

Voted NO on replacing death penalty with life imprisonment.

Amendment to replace death penalty crimes in the 1994 Omnibus Crime Bill with life imprisonment.
Bill HR 4092 ; vote number 1994-107 on Apr 14, 1994

Rated 38% by CURE, indicating mixed votes on rehabilitation.

Holden scores 38% by CURE on rehabilitation issues

CURE (Citizens United for Rehabilitation of Errants) is a membership organization of families of prisoners, prisoners, former prisoners and other concerned citizens. CURE's two goals are

  1. to use prisons only for those who have to be in them; and
  2. for those who have to be in them, to provide them all the rehabilitative opportunities they need to turn their lives around.
The ratings indicate the legislator’s percentage score on CURE’s preferred votes.
Source: CURE website 00n-CURE on Dec 31, 2000

Increase funding for "COPS ON THE BEAT" program.

Holden co-sponsored increasing funding for "COPS ON THE BEAT" program

COPS Improvements Act of 2007 - Amends the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to make grants for public safety and community policing programs (COPS ON THE BEAT or COPS program). Revises grant purposes to provide for:

  1. the hiring o Authorizes the Attorney General to make grants to:
  2. assign community prosecutors to handle cases from specific geographic areas and address counterterrorism problems, specific violent crime problems, and localized violent and other crime problems; and
    Source: COPS Improvements Act (S.368/H.R.1700) 07-S368 on Jan 23, 2007

    More prison cells; more truth in sentencing.

    Holden co-sponsored more prison cells; more truth in sentencing

    Source: Truth in Sentencing Act (H.R.3584) 1993-H3584 on Nov 20, 1993

    Life imprisonment for repeat sexual predators.

    Holden co-sponsored restricting parole for repeat sexual predators

    Source: Protection from Sexual Predators Act (H.R.3990) 1994-H3990 on Mar 9, 1994

    Prevent luxurious conditions in prisons.

    Holden co-sponsored preventing luxurious conditions in prisons

    To amend the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 to prevent luxurious conditions in prisons. The "No Frills Prison Act" requires each State, to be eligible for truth in sentencing incentive grants, to demonstrate that it:

    1. provides living conditions and opportunities within its prisons that are not more luxurious than those that the average prisoner would have experienced if not incarcerated;
    2. does not provide to any such prisoner specified benefits or privileges, including earned good time credits, less than 40 hours a week of work that either offsets or reduces the expenses of keeping the prisoner or provides resources toward restitution of victims, unmonitored phone calls (with exceptions), in-cell television viewing, possession of pornographic materials, instruction or training equipment for any martial art or bodybuilding or weightlifting equipment, or dress or hygiene other than as is uniform or standard in the prison; and
    3. in the case of a prisoner serving a sentence for a crime of violence which resulted in serious bodily injury to another, does not provide housing other than in separate cell blocks intended for violent prisoners, less than nine hours a day of physical labor (with exceptions), any release from the prison for any purpose unless under physical or mechanical restraint and under constant supervision of at least one armed correctional officer, or any viewing of television.
      Source: No Frills Prison Act (H.R.663) 95-HR663 on Jan 24, 1995

      Other candidates on Crime: Tim Holden on other issues:
      PA Gubernatorial:
      Ed Rendell
      PA Senatorial:
      Arlen Specter
      Bob Casey

      Democratic retirements
      & special elections:

      D,AL-5:Cramer
      D,CA-12:Lantos
      D,CO-2:Udall
      D,IN-7:Carson
      D,NY-21:McNulty
      D,ME-1:Allen
      D,MD-4:Wynn
      D,NM-3:Udall
      D,OR-5:Hooley

      Republican special elections:
      R,IL-14:Hastert
      R,LA-1:Jindal
      R,LA-6:Baker
      R,MS-1:Wicker
      R,OH-5:Gillmor
      Republican retirements:
      R,AL-2:Everett
      R,AZ-1:Renzi
      R,CA-4:Doolittle
      R,CA-52:Hunter
      R,CO-6:Tancredo
      R,FL-15:Weldon
      R,IL-11:Weller
      R,IL-18:LaHood
      R,KY-2:Lewis
      R,LA-4:McCrery
      R,MD-1:Gilchrest
      R,MN-3:Ramstad
      R,MO-9:Hulshof
      R,MS-3:Pickering
      R,NJ-3:Saxton
      R,NJ-7:Ferguson
      R,NM-1:Wilson
      R,NM-2:Pearce
      R,NY-13:Fossella
      R,NY-25:Walsh
      R,NY-26:Reynolds
      R,OH-7:Hobson
      R,OH-15:Pryce
      R,OH-16:Regula
      R,PA-5:Peterson
      R,VA-11:Davis
      R,WY-0:Cubin
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      Page last updated: Sep 18, 2008