Hodge and Budge knew how to pack those prisoners in
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ROBERT GARDNER
* EDITOR’S NOTE: The Daily Pilot has agreed to republish The Verdict,
the ever-popular column written for many years by retired Corona Del
Mar jurist and historian Robert Gardner, in exchange for donations to
the Surfrider Foundation. This particular column was originally
published March 27, 1993.
It was a good thing for Hodge and Budge that a certain federal
judge wasn’t around when they were running the Newport Beach and
Orange County jails. He’d have sentenced them to terms in their
respective jails for so long you’d have had to pump daylight to them.
We are all aware that some time ago a certain federal judge
threatened to put Sheriff Brad Gates in his own jail for operating an
over-crowded jail. I wasn’t here at the time, but I understand that
federal judge fined poor Brad $50,000 for running his overcrowded
jail and that the county paid the fine.
That was a good thing for Brad. If someone hadn’t paid the fine,
Brad would have had to spend the time in his own jail in lieu of the
fine. And at one day in jail for every two dollars of the fine, Brad
would have faced 25,000 days in jail. While Brad is a comparatively
young man, he might have had a little trouble serving the full term.
So after that, Brad began to release prisoners to keep out of his
own jail only to be threatened with jail by some local judges who
thought he ought to keep the people in whom they had sentenced. Talk
about being caught between a rock and a hard place!
The federal judge thought the Orange County jail was overcrowded.
Over- crowded? He should have seen the overcrowded conditions at the
old Newport Beach and Orange County jails. Compared to them, the
present county jail is the Ritz Carlton.
The old Newport Beach jail was located near Newport Pier. It had
one cell that measured about 20 by 30 feet. On a busy Saturday night
during prohibition, the police jammed up to 75 men into that cell. It
bore a startling resemblance to the Black Hole of Calcutta. After
Prohibition, the average number on a busy Saturday night dropped to
about 50, all of which goes to show that one could get drunk quicker
on the straight alcohol of Prohibition than the legal whiskey after
the repeal of Prohibition. I’m sure some future historian is going to
find that tidbit fascinating.
No one died in that cell, but it did get a bit messy. With that
many drunks crowded in one small place, someone was sure to get sick
and throw up. That seemed to have a domino effect. The sight, smell
and sound of 75 or even 50 men all barfing at the same time was quite
a spectacle.
Hodge, Chief of Police Rowland Hodgkinson, ran that jail. As I
say, that federal judge would have had a field day with Hodge.
Up in Santa Ana, Deputy Sheriff Theo “Budge” Lacey ran the old
Orange County Jail. No matter who was sheriff, Budge stayed on as
jailer. His father before him had been jailer. I guess it ran in the
family.
That jail had been built in the early ‘20s to hold 250 prisoners.
By the time we built the new jail, Brad’s, that old jail held up to
750 prisoners regularly. Ol’ Budge just jammed them in every which
way. They slept on the floors and probably hung from the rafters.
Again, it was lucky for Budge that the federal judge wasn’t around.
Well, enough of yesterday’s horrors. I have a solution to the
problem of overcrowding in our jails and prisons. That solution is to
follow the Samoan practice.
When I went to Samoa, I inherited a sentencing practice that, at
first blush, startled me. A Samoan prisoner got weekend release to be
with his family. That took care of Saturday and Sunday. Then, during
the week, he got work release to work on the family taro patch. That
took care of Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. As you
can see, we didn’t have much over-crowding at our lock-up called the
Tafuna Correctional Institution. A nice spinoff of this practice was
that we didn’t have many escapes. Escape from what? And escape to
where? The closest island was 70 miles away.
I must admit I was a little taken aback when I first arrived to
run into a man on the sidewalk I had sentenced the day before to 45
years in prison for murder. But I said, “Hi,” and he said, “Hi,” and
we got along famously.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a retired judge and a longtime Newport Beach
resident.
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