Pubdate: Fri, 01 Jun 2001 Source: Associated Press (Wire) Copyright: 2001 Associated Press Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/27 Author: Ivan Chavez, Associated Press Writer MANDATORY MINIMUMS 'NOT UNIFORMLY APPLIED,' CONGRESSWOMAN SAYS Mandatory sentencing laws too often force judges to impose discriminatory prison terms on minority defendants, a California congresswoman said Friday. "We're seeing that mandatory minimums are not uniformly applied. Black men and women are serving longer sentences than their white counterparts," Democratic U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters said at a conference on drug-policy reform that brought together religious leaders, elected officials and drug-policy experts. She said there is a need to rethink the federal government's war on drugs, particularly mandatory minimum sentencing laws. Such laws, she said, force judges to hand out predeterminate sentences, without parole, to people convicted of certain crimes, particularly drug-related offenses. Women have been sentenced to prison for answering the telephone, she said. For even talking to whoever was on the other end of the line, women have been convicted of drug conspiracy, she said. "The rate of imprisonment for black women is more than eight times the rate of imprisonment of white women. The rate of imprisonment of Hispanic women is nearly four times the rate of imprisonment of white women," Waters said. Last week, Waters reintroduced a bill to repeal mandatory minimum sentences for drug related offenses. The Major Drug Trafficking Prosecution Act of 2001 would eliminate mandatory minimum sentences for simple possession, distribution, manufacturing and other nonviolent drug-related offenses. "The bill would also allow the courts the flexibility to place people on probation or suspend their sentence," which would be "crucial for first-time nonviolent offenders," Waters said. Another goal of the legislation is to focus federal resources on high-level drug dealers instead of peripheral people like street dealers. Local and state prosecutors would handle lower-level cases, such as those involving the street dealers or "mules," which is a nickname for smugglers who carry the drugs into the United States. Waters said treatment has been found to be more cost-effective in controlling drug abuse than expanding prison systems. "Each dollar invested in drug abuse prevention will save 15 dollars in reduced health, justice and other societal costs," she said, emphasizing the need to educate inmates who may be functionally illiterate. Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson told the conference Friday that the public believes the United States is losing the war on drugs because it's impossible to stop people from using drugs. "The American public knows the drug war has been an abysmal failure," Anderson said. A survey taken in March showed 75 percent of Americans believe the war is being lost, he said. "In 1999 alone," he said, "state, local and federal governments spent $30 billion combatting illegal drugs." On Saturday, Gov. Gary Johnson, an advocate of legalizing marijuana, will address the conference, called "Drug Policies for the New Millennium," which is sponsored by the Washington, D.C.-based Lindesmith Center-Drug Policy Foundation. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake