Pubdate: Mon, 20 Aug 2001
Source: Seattle Times (WA)
Copyright: 2001 The Seattle Times Company
Contact:  http://www.seattletimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409
Author: Glenda Cooper, The Washington Post

DRUG CASES HAVE INCREASED, JUSTICE DEPARTMENT SAYS

Critics Rebut Figures

WASHINGTON - Drug offenders spend a year more in prison on average than 
they did 15 years ago, and drug offenses now make up about one- third of 
federal criminal cases - both the result of tougher drug sentencing, 
according to new figures from the Department of Justice Bureau of Statistics.

More than 38,200 suspects were referred to federal prosecutors in 1999 for 
alleged drug offenses, up from 11,854 in 1984. About 84 percent of these 
suspects were subsequently charged in a U.S. court, showed the figures, 
which were released yesterday.

But criminal-justice experts immediately questioned the agency's 
conclusions, saying that according to Sentencing Commission figures, 
sentences had fallen during the 1990s. Others questioned whether more 
punitive prison terms would in reality deter drug crime if prevention and 
treatment did not also become a priority.

Changes in federal statutes mean that from 1984 to 1999, prison terms 
imposed on drug offenders have increased from 62 months to 74 months on 
average. Almost 90 percent of drug defendants were convicted, the vast 
majority of drug trafficking.

Of 38,288 suspects referred to federal prosecutors for alleged drug 
offenses during 1999, 31 percent were involved with marijuana, 28 percent 
cocaine powder, 15 percent crack cocaine and 15 percent methamphetamine. 
The rest were involved with opiates and other drugs. Most were importers, 
manufacturers and large-scale dealers.

Racial differences were stark: 86 percent of crack-cocaine offenders were 
black, while 72 percent of methamphetamine offenders were white. Cocaine 
was spread through all ethnic groups.

Attorney General John Ashcroft welcomed the findings. "This report shows 
that tougher federal drug laws are making a real difference in clearing 
major drug offenders from our streets," he said. "Federal law enforcement 
is targeted effectively at convicting major drug traffickers and punishing 
them with longer lockups in prison."

But law professors questioned the agency's conclusions.

They said figures from the Administrative Office of the United States 
Courts revealed that since 1991-1992 the average drug sentence had declined 
by 22 percent, nearly two years per defendant, and that preliminary figures 
from the Sentencing Commission showed the decline continuing throughout 
fiscal year 2000.

"It's clear to me that more federal judges and prosecutors have voted with 
their feet on sentence length," said Frank O. Bowman III, associate law 
professor at the Indiana University School of Law in Indianapolis and 
co-author of "Quiet Rebellion? Explaining Nearly a Decade of Declining 
Federal Drug Sentences." "They are saying as a group that they don't think 
drug sentences need to be as long as they are to accomplish their aim."

Alfred Blumstein, a criminologist at Carnegie Mellon University, said the 
apparent inconsistency in the figures could be explained by a strong growth 
in the length of sentences during the 1980s, which had leveled and then 
declined during the '90s.

"The problem (with punitive responses) is that it does not take you very 
far," he added. "The drug market is demand-driven ... and so you have to 
deal with that through prevention and treatment."
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