Pubdate: Thu, 28 Dec 2000 Source: Virginian-Pilot (VA) Copyright: 2000, The Virginian-Pilot Contact: 150 W. Brambleton Ave., Norfolk, Virginia 23510 Website: http://www.pilotonline.com Forum: http://www.pilotonline.com/webx/cgi-bin/WebX HARSH DRUG SENTENCES MUST BE RE-EXAMINED President Bill Clinton acted with both compassion and common sense when he freed Kemba Smith from a federal prison last week. A grateful Smith, a Richmond-area native who served more than five years of a 24 1/2 -year term, said after her release that she would ``urge revision of tough, mandatory sentences that require long periods of incarceration for nonviolent offenders.'' However, it will be up to Clinton's successor, President-elect George W. Bush, to re-examine those draconian sentencing guidelines. Thus, we'll all see just how ``compassionate'' the conservative Bush will be. Quite simply, federal mandatory minimum sentencing laws, many of them passed in the 1980s as a weapon in the drug war, should be rescinded or revised. They have not lived up to their original promise. The laws have treated drug kingpins and low-level players as equals. They have tied the hands of judges, who are not allowed to use discretion in passing sentence on individuals who played minor roles in drug organizations. They have not noticeably stemmed the tide of drug trafficking or drug use. And many people perceive the laws as racist, because crack cocaine defendants have been treated much more harshly than defendants facing powder cocaine charges. Because of that disparity, African American defendants have borne the brunt of these laws. Eric E. Sterling, president of the nonprofit Criminal Justice Policy Foundation, has been particularly critical. In a column earlier this year, Sterling wrote: ``The U.S. Sentencing Commission reported in 1995 that more than 55 percent of federal drug defendants were the lowest-level offenders -- `mules,' bodyguards or street-level dealers. Only 11.2 percent were high-level traffickers. Of over 20,000 federal drug defendants in 1998, only 41 were kingpins. The Justice Department is not going after high-level traffickers.'' And Sterling should know more than a little bit about the intent of these laws. From 1979 to 1989 he was counsel to the U.S. House Judiciary Committee, at a time when the mandatory-minimum sentencing laws were being drafted. Kemba Smith, the Virginia woman who formerly attended Hampton University, is indeed fortunate that Clinton commuted her sentence. She was a low-level operative in a drug ring run by her boyfriend, Peter Hall, who was shot to death before police could arrest him on a federal indictment. Smith did not sell the drugs, but she did help transport them. However, this first-time, nonviolent offender earned a prison term longer than the average state sentences for crimes such as manslaughter, robbery and sexual assault. Smith benefited from a huge amount of media publicity, the backing of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and the tireless efforts of her parents, Gus and Odessa Smith. Countless others, however, remain in prison under circumstances similar to Smith's. What of them? They shouldn't have to navigate the court system, or beg the president for mercy, all the while locked up under an extremely punitive sentence. Bush must already know this. He should help set policy on this issue and bring about some fairness. The current sentencing guidelines are a disgrace. They must be revised. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe