Pubdate: Sun, 19 Nov 2000 Source: Virginian-Pilot (VA) Copyright: 2000, The Virginian-Pilot Contact: http://www.pilotonline.com Forum: http://www.pilotonline.com/webx/cgi-bin/WebX Author: John Hopkins 8 VIRGINIA CLERGY JOIN CALL FOR CLINTON TO RELEASE NONVIOLENT DRUG OFFENDERS Eight Virginia religious leaders are among 525 clergy throughout the nation urging President Clinton to commute the sentences of low-level, nonviolent drug offenders. ``This could be a great legacy for him as an outgoing gesture of real statesmanship and understanding,'' said the Rev. Gordon Woolard of Grace Covenant Presbyterian Church in Blacksburg. ``My hope is that this could be something where he could rise above certain political pressures.'' In a letter to be delivered to the president Monday, the clergy seek the release of federal low-level, nonviolent drug prisoners who have served at least five years of a lengthy sentence. The letter urges that the released inmates be placed on supervised parole. A 1994 U.S. Justice Department study found more than 16,000 low-level drug violators without violence in their records. The issue is not innocence, but fair punishment, the clergy argue. ``Scores of Americans are serving unconscionable long sentences for drug offenses -- in some cases 20 years or more -- which are grossly out of proportion to the nature and severity of their crimes,'' the clergy wrote. No religious leaders from South Hampton Roads signed the letter. Virginia clergy signing the letter are Rabbi Jonathon Biatch of Beth El Hebrew Congregation in Alexandria; the Rev. Cynthia S. Mazur of United Church of Christ in Alexandria; the Rev. George H. Booth of United Church of Christ in Arlington; the Rev. Walter Clark (retired) of Episcopal Church in Maurertown; professor Dawn A. DeVries of Union Seminary in Richmond; the Rev. Kathryn Forest Talley of Skipwith United Methodist Church; and the Rev. Dr. Hunter P. Mabry of Methodist Federation for Social Action in Waynesboro. Woolard said he signed the letter after the tough federal sentences hit home. ``I`ve seen it personally in our own church, where we had a guy sentenced to 17 years,'' he said Friday. ``The whole thing was such a mess. So that's why I became sympathetic with this particular cause.'' The man, who is engaged to one of Woolard's church members, is serving time about 600 to 700 miles away for growing marijuana for his personal use. The man is in his mid-40s, Woolard said, adding that he doesn't condone the use of drugs. ``We've taken him out for 17 years,'' Woolard said. ``So he contributes nothing to society, and on top of that, his fiancee and little daughter are denied the support he could provide them.'' The religious leaders call themselves the Coalition for Jubilee Clemency. The year 2000 has been proclaimed by many religious denominations as a ``jubilee year,'' in which debts and people are to be forgiven. In the Old Testament book of Leviticus, God tells Moses to announce a jubilee every 50 years. The coalition believes freeing nonviolent drug offenders entails political risk. The president, at the end of his term, would be free of such risk. ``It is unlikely that the opportunity to free significant numbers of deserving prisoners will arise again for four or eight years,'' said Chad Thevenot, coalition coordinator. View the full text of the letter and the names of clergy who signed it at www.cjpf.org/clemency (http://www.cjpf.org/clemency). - --- MAP posted-by: Derek