Pubdate: Thu, 25 Nov 1999 Date: 11/25/1999 Source: Orange County Register (CA) Author: George Lippman I find Deputy District Attorney Kraig St.Pierre's use of statistics concerning the merits of the "three strikes" law to be misleading ["'Three strikes' law, by the numbers," Letters, Nov.22]. St. Pierre quotes percentages without revealing the magnitude of the actual numbers. It is the sheer number of people being imprisoned that indicates the need for study of this misguided law, not the percentages. Sixty-percent reduction of sentences has still resulted in more than 4,200 people now serving life sentences, with an additional 44,000 people at risk with one or two strikes. When committed by persons with prior criminal records, even non-violent or relatively trivial misdemeanors are upgraded to felonies. California has used this law more than 40 times as often as any other state and more times than all the other states in the Union. If this isn't "overzealous" then I don't know what is. Serious questions also have arisen over the administration of this financially and socially devastating law. It should be everyone's concern to ask why and to welcome a study. George Lippman, Fullerton