Gov. Jerry Brown is giving in to the federal judges whom he’s fought all year over the solution to fixing California’s overcrowded prisons.

Brown battled to throw out a court order requiring California to reduce its prison population to 137.5 percent of system capacity by the end of the year. When the judges stuck to their Dec. 31 deadline, he asked the United States Supreme Court to stay the decision.
But earlier this summer, the nation’s highest court rejected Brown's request. So the governor is now proposing a $315 million plan to meet the court’s population mandate by sending prisoners to out-of-state prisons, community jails and privately run prison facilities.
“The plan is to find as many cells as needed,” Brown said. “The only way to comply with (the federal court order) consistent with public safety, consistent with maintaining the reforms we’ve already introduced, is to purchase additional capacity. That’s the plan.”
California needs to either release or find space for about 9,500 prisoners to meet the federal mandate. “We are not – any of us – willing to release an additional single prisoner,” said Assembly Speaker John Perez, who is supporting Brown’s proposal. So are the Assembly and Senate’s top Republicans.