Pubdate: Mon, 13 Mar 2000 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2000 The Dallas Morning News Contact: P.O. Box 655237, Dallas, Texas 75265 Fax: (972) 263-0456 Feedback: http://dmnweb.dallasnews.com/letters/ Website: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Forum: http://forums.dallasnews.com:81/webx Author: Michelle R. Davis / Knight Ridder Newspapers FEDERAL DRUG OFFENDERS SPENDING LESS TIME IN PRISON, STUDY FINDS WASHINGTON - Convicted federal drug offenders are spending less time behind bars, but more of them are being prosecuted, according to a new study of judicial records. The shorter sentences, over a 1992-98 time span that includes most of the Clinton administration, suggest that federal judges and prosecutors are finding ways around tough mandatory minimum sentences mandated by Congress to crack down on drug traffickers. To some experts, the findings also suggest that federal agents are increasingly nailing "small fry" drug offenders rather than the kingpins whom federal agencies are uniquely suited to pursue. "There has been an undue emphasis on the lesser figures in drug trafficking because they're easier to convict," said U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee. The study, by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, a government performance analysis center in Washington that is associated with Syracuse University, found that the average federal drug sentence dropped about 20 percent between 1992 and 1998. The Justice Department did not dispute the figures. "We have been aware of this trend for several years," said department spokesman John Russell. For the Drug Enforcement Administration, which brings most drug cases to federal courts, the average sentence dropped to 75 months in 1998 from 94 months in 1992. Results for individual judicial districts varied dramatically. DEA-instigated federal drug sentences in the New York City area, for example, fell to less than 70 months in 1998 from over 140 months in 1992. In western North Carolina, the average soared from 36 months to 103 months. In Texas, the Dallas-based Northern District had a 3 percent increase in the average sentence, from 102 months in 1992 to 105 months in 1998. But the average sentence dropped in the other three districts: 39 percent for the Eastern District, 30 percent for the Southern District and 37 percent for the Western District. Nationally, the number of federal drug prosecutions rose to an all-time high of 21,571 in 1998, up 16 percent from 1992. DEA and the U.S. Customs Service, the second biggest narcotics enforcement agency, remain strongly focused on marijuana. In 1998, their convictions involving marijuana totaled 34 percent of all their drug cases, compared with 28 percent for powder cocaine and 17 percent for crack cocaine. The marijuana quantities are large, however. To rate a 5-year mandatory federal drug sentence, a trafficker would have to be dealing more than 100 kilos of marijuana compared with 500 grams of cocaine. Bob Weiner, spokesman for U.S. drug-policy coordinator Barry McCaffrey, called the new report "a mixed batch of statistics." He said it was obvious most arrests involve smaller cases. "There's only one person at the top of the pyramid and everybody else is down from that," he said. "Big cases, big problems. Little cases, little problems," said Eric E. Sterling, president of the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation, a Washington nonpartisan think-tank. "The U.S. Justice Department is focusing too much of its effort on low level cases." But analysts also say that federal judges, who have long complained that mandatory sentencing is too rigid and severe, have found a way around those mandates with the cooperation of Congress and the Clinton administration. One of those bypasses is a "safety valve" provision adopted by Congress in 1994, giving judges more flexibility in sentencing low-level cases. Since then, drug defendants who cooperate with prosecutors have been rewarded with shorter sentences, said Mr. Russell, Justice spokesman. Federal agencies should do more to go after kingpins because local police don't have the resources, said Mark Mauer, assistant director for The Sentencing Project, a Washington-based policy research and advocacy group. "The justification for federal prosecution is that they have the resources to handle complex, high level cases," he said. The report "suggests that U.S. prosecutors are not targeting the most serious cases." The matter is with the courts and out of the Customs Service's hands, said spokesman Dean Boyd. "Customs has absolutely no control over sentencing," he said. "We don't do sentencing." - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson