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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDebtors' Prisons Are Alive and Well in America
http://www.alternet.org/economy/debtors-prisons-are-alive-and-well-americaThe concept of a debtors prison is usually deemed a thing of the past, something out of a Dickens novel. But just this past June and July, New Jersey counties conducted one of their twice-annual raids to arrest people who are behind in child support payments. After the raids several New Jersey county sheriffs offices issued press releases proudly announcing the number of deadbeat parents theyd locked up.
New Jersey is not alone. Weeks ago Lebanon, Pennsylvania issued bench warrants for people who were behind on child support, in addition to publishing these debtors names. The trend is abundantly clear to those in the criminal justice community: incarceration is increasingly routine to child support enforcement practice -- even though many who owe child support are indigent. And as August brings with it National Child Support Awareness Month -- an obscure designation established in the mid-nineties by the Clinton Administration and linked child support enforcement to Clintons welfare reform legislation -- it is clear that federal policies toward the poor encourage toughness in collecting on child support arrears, often resulting in local incarceration of child support debtors. States and counties maintain the authority to lock people up for their child support debts -- revealing one of the many ways in which poverty is criminalized in America.
New Jersey county sheriffs are mandated to conduct the arrest raids as part of the state funding they receive, and they stand behind the policy. I believe that it is important to have the ability to arrest violators and bring them before the court when they do not pay support, Sheriff Jean Stanfield of Burlington County, New Jersey told AlterNet in an email. Without the threat of incarceration, far fewer custodial parents would be receiving the child support owed to them.
The arrests in Burlington County took place June 18, 19 and 20, and a total of 48 were arrested. According to documents provided by Sheriff Stanfield on July 25, four of the child support obligors remain in prison; five were jailed for more than two weeks; and several were jailed for one-four nights. All but four have ostensibly male names. Sheriff Stanfields press release did indicate that nearly $1 million in child support arrears were owed, they has not yet shared with AlterNet how much money was collected from the raids.
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Debtors' Prisons Are Alive and Well in America (Original Post)
xchrom
Aug 2013
OP
Waiting For Everyman
(9,385 posts)1. The child support gestapo are pretty bad.
But I've noticed that it rarely seems to target the wealthy offenders.
The thing is, the courts are supposed to see to it that support decrees are realistic, but they are too corrupt. The family courts have long been a disgusting mess. My sympathies to anyone who has to be involved with one.