Oklahoma Code § 22-1514

Title 22. Criminal Procedure: Purposes and policies of the criminal justice and
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corrections systems.
The following purposes and policies of the criminal justice and
corrections systems are hereby established:
1.  Protection of the public.  Incarceration should be viewed by
the court both as punishment and as a means of protecting the
public.  Limitations on the freedom of the offender and the
appropriate level of custody should be dictated in the first
instance by the nature of the offense, the violent character of the
offender, the proclivity of the offender to engage in criminal
conduct as demonstrated by his criminal record, and the sound
judgment of the sentencing court after taking into account all of
the relevant aggravating and mitigating factors involved in the
offender's record of criminal conduct.
2.  Punishment of the offender.  After the interests of public
protection have been addressed, consideration should be given to
restriction of the liberty of the offender in such manner and to
such extent as is necessary to demonstrate clearly that the

offender's conduct is unacceptable to society and to discourage a
repetition of such conduct.  In determining the appropriate
punishment, the court should consider a range of sanctions at the
state or community level which may include incarceration, various
degrees of restrictions on the offender's liberty including house
arrest, electronic monitoring, various degrees of supervision,
community penalties, community service, restitution, reparation, or
fines.
3.  Rehabilitation of the offender.  Every sentencing plan
should consider treatment and rehabilitative needs of the offender
to the extent that it addresses the cause of the criminal behavior
and, therefore, might assist in correcting such behavior.  The
offender should be enrolled in a program of rehabilitation over a
definite minimal period of time.  The program of rehabilitation
should involve work and recreation and may involve education,
psychological or psychiatric counseling, treatment for alcohol or
drug abuse and sexual aggression either within or without the prison
walls as the individual case may indicate.  The court may recommend
remedies for alcoholism, substance abuse, mental illness, education
and employment deficiencies, and may order community-based offenders
to pay for such treatment to the extent the offender is able.
Public institutions should respond to the court order at no cost to
the indigent offender.  Where treatment is not available from public
institutions, the state should purchase appropriate treatment from
the private sector.
4.  Restitution and reparation.  When appropriate, the
sentencing plan should provide for restitution or reparation to the
victim or victims, whether they be individual citizens,
corporations, or society as a whole, to be paid as soon as
practicable.  Such restitution or reparation should include
repayment for any property stolen or damaged, medical costs and lost
wages of the victims, court costs and reasonable costs to cover
pretrial detention, and restitution to the community through
community service.  In those cases where the offender can be
punished and rehabilitated outside of prison without jeopardizing
the security of the society at large in their persons or property,
it is appropriate and encouraged that the offender pay his debt to
society through a range of punishments which are alternative to
incarceration.  The court should order such supervision or
restrictions as deemed necessary for the offender to comply with the
restitution orders.  Failure to comply should result in stricter
measures.
5.  Work policy for offenders.  It is the policy of this state
that offenders should work when reasonably possible, either at jobs
in the private sector to pay restitution and support their
dependents, or at community service jobs that benefit the public, or
at useful work while in prison or jail, or at educational or

treatment endeavors as a part of a rehabilitation program.
Offenders should be offered the opportunity to reduce the duration
of their sentences by earning "time" credit for work endeavors in
achieving vocational or educational skill levels.  Prisoners who are
able and do not work or who refuse to participate in treatment
programs should be prohibited from enjoying privileges which may be
provided to inmates beyond those required by law.
6.  Responsibility of Department of Corrections.  It is the goal
of the Department of Corrections to provide adequate prison space to
ensure that those sentenced to prison will remain incarcerated until
such time as they can be safely released, or until their active
sentences are completed, and to provide community-based supervision
for those offenders selected for supervised probation and parole by
the courts and the Pardon and Parole Board.
It is the mission of the Department to provide housing,
clothing, food and medical care to its inmates, to maintain a safe
and secure prison system, to keep accurate records, to offer job
training, education, counseling, work and treatment programs deemed
appropriate to monitor and advance the rehabilitative progress of
its inmates, to provide a fair and orderly progression through
custody levels, and to make data and recommendations regarding
parole available to the Pardon and Parole Board.  As an inmate
demonstrates that he is no longer a threat to society, that the
punishment has been effective and that a program of rehabilitation
is showing progress, the inmate's level of custody may be
commensurately reduced in an orderly progression through custody
levels to parole and release from supervision.
It is the mission of the Department of Corrections to receive
convicted offenders selected by the courts and the Pardon and Parole
Board and to protect society through a coordinated program of
community supervision which provides realistic opportunities for
probationers and parolees to develop skills necessary to adjust to
free society.  As a probationer or parolee demonstrates that the
supervision has been effective and that a community treatment
program is showing progress, the level of supervision may be
commensurately reduced in an orderly progression to prepare for
release from supervision.

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