Pubdate: Tue, 20 Feb 2001 Source: Gary Post-Tribune, The (IN) Copyright: 2001 Post-Tribune Publishing Contact: 1065 Broadway, Gary IN 46402-2998 Fax: (219) 881-3234 Website: http://www.post-trib.com/ Author: William Raspberry Note: William Raspberry is a columnist for The Washigton Post. CLINTON'S WORDS OUTDISTANCED HIS ACTIONS Black Americans have been screaming about the disparate sentences for crack and powder cocaine for a decade - ever since it became clear that the main effect of the 1988 drug-control legislation was a wildly disproportionate incarceration rate for black drug offenders. Six days before he left office, President Clinton came riding to the rescue. Well, maybe not to the rescue, but he did recommend that the next sheriff give serious thought to forming a posse to do something about the problem. The recommendation came in a Jan. 14 op-ed piece the lame-duck president wrote for The New York Times. He spoke with considerable passion about his desire that America move toward racial fairness and reconciliation. Then: "We should also re-examine our federal sentencing policies, particularly mandatory minimum sentences for nonviolent offenders. We should immediately reduce the disparity between crack and powder-cocaine sentences." Maybe it slipped his mind during his eight-year presidency that coincided almost exactly with the incarceration explosion. Yes, explosion. According to a new report from the Justice Policy Institute, more inmates were added to prison and jail populations under Clinton than under any other president in American history. In federal prisons alone, more inmates were added on Clinton's watch than under former Presidents Bush and Reagan combined. "President Clinton stole the show from the tough-on-crime Republicans," JPI president Vincent Schiraldi said in releasing the report, "Too Little, Too Late: President Clinton's Prison Legacy." "President Clinton was right to call for criminal justice reform; he was wrong to do so little about it while he was in office." As it happens, he had a chance at least to engage the crack/powder fight as early as his first term in office. In 1994, he signed a bill setting up a commission designed to develop and oversee sentencing guidelines. In 1995, the commission recommended equalizing the amount of cocaine, whether in powder or crack form, that would trigger the mandatory sentences that have been a major contributor to the incarceration explosion. Such recommendations, says JPI senior policy analyst Jason Ziedenberg, usually win "virtually automatic acceptance." But this time, Congress rejected the recommendation, and Clinton, in effect, signed the rejection into law. In other words, he passed up a chance to do what his recent New York Times piece so glibly recommends - reducing the high-sounding words of that column to a largely empty gesture. I'm reminded of the big deal he made of putting the District of Columbia's whiny new license plate - "Taxation Without Representation" - on the presidential limousine, in ostensible support for expanding the feeble franchise of residents. But the license-plate change -made just a couple of days before last Christmas - was about the sum of his official effort in that regard. President George W. Bush, in one of his first decisions as Clinton's successor, had the plates removed. Interestingly, the Justice Policy Institute now is looking to Bush as the best hope for sentencing reform. The new report notes that Bush has expressed an interest in "making sure the powder-cocaine and crack-cocaine penalties are the same" and in diverting nonviolent offenders from prison into treatment. A Bush-Cheney campaign white paper called for providing an additional $1 billion for states to expand local drug treatment programs. "When Clinton came into office, he had a 10-year incarceration rate to outshine," said JPI's Lisa Feldman, who co-authored "Too Little, Too Late." "As the governor with the nation's largest prison population and the most executions, President Bush has no need to prove his conservative mettle. He has shown he can be tough on crime. Now he has the opportunity to prove he can be smart on crime as well." Smart-aleck question: Who would get more credit among black voters - Bush for reforming the sentencing disparities we've been complaining about for so long? Or Clinton, for looking for office space in Harlem? - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart