Pubdate: Wed, 20 Jun 2001 Source: Connecticut Post (CT) Copyright: 2001sMediaNews Group, Inc Contact: http://www.ctpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/574 LET SENTENCE STAND DESPITE GUIDELINES U.S. District Court Judge Alan H. Nevas should be congratulated for making fairness and justice his sole concerns in sentencing a 21-year- old city man who supervised drug dealers at the P.T. Barnum Housing project in Bridgeport. Under federal sentencing guidelines, Nevas could have imposed a life sentence on convicted drug lieutenant John Foster. However, the judge chose to dispense with the guidelines because he saw many extenuating circumstances in this particular case. As Nevas pointed out, the offender is the son of a mother who abused drugs and a father who was mentally ill and abandoned his son. The young man sought support on the streets because he'd had little or no chance to learn a law-abiding lifestyle. What's more, Foster's very existence had been hidden from aunts and uncles who could have helped him and provided him with better role models. If those educated relatives had had a hand in rearing the young man, Nevas said, he probably wouldn't be standing here today. He'd probably be standing somewhere receiving a diploma. Most important, the judge pointed out that Foster had never been involved in any violence. Make no mistake: What this young man did is still wrong. He had to be taken off the streets. That is what Nevas did by sentencing Foster to 27 years behind bars not exactly a slap on the wrist. However, the jurist's decision wisely leaves room for Foster to rehabilitate himself and start life anew one day. Nevas refused to take all of Foster's opportunities away with a single, crushing blow, despite the federal guidelines. Of course, the U.S. attorney's office might now decide to appeal the sentence on the grounds that the guidelines weren't followed, but we hope that doesn't happen. The government must consider the young man's incredibly difficult childhood and his potential for rehabilitation and let the current sentence stand. - --- MAP posted-by: GD