Pubdate: Sat, 16 Nov 2002 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Page: A1 - Front Page Copyright: 2002 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 Author: Thanassis Cambanis, Globe Staff TOUGHER FEDERAL SENTENCES PUSHED US Attorney Focuses on Drug, Gun Crime US Attorney Michael Sullivan, in a significant shift, is ordering federal prosecutors to increase the recommended sentences of defendants convicted of drug and gun charges, adding between two to 30 years to their prison terms. The move to stiffen drug sentences in particular runs counter to a national backlash against the length of federal drug sentences, which have dropped by more than 20 percent over the last decade, according to the US Sentencing Commission. "This is a kind of sea change in the practice of this office," Sullivan said recently. "I think it's important that we use the tools that allow for the most significant punishment." Sullivan's new policy has raised questions about the fairness of decades-long sentences for crimes that in state court would carry sentences half as long, and the wisdom of sending addicts to prison rather than to treatment programs. Under Sullivan's "enhancement" policy, a convicted drug dealer's minimum 10-year sentence can double to 20 years if he has a prior state drug conviction. "Indigent defendants are getting hammered by this US attorney's office, and it's appalling," said Charles W. Rankin, chairman of the group of court-appointed defense lawyers who practice in federal court in Boston. "The sentences people are getting are huge, and to what end? Just because the government wants to be tough and macho." Sullivan, a former Republican district attorney in Plymouth County, says the policy - which was introduced in March but only gained public attention recently - reflects his pledge to get tough on criminals. The policy comes amid sustained national debate over federal sentencing guidelines and a growing belief that drug sentences are too harsh. Some skeptics on the bench and in the legal community question whether longer sentences deter crime, while others - including the US Sentencing Commission - have recommended leveling the disparities in drug sentences. But in what he views as a war against violent crime, Sullivan believes prosecutors must use every weapon in their arsenal. "The public expects we do everything possible to ensure the safety of the communities that we serve," Sullivan said. "It's critically important in terms of the message we send to the community, whether that's people thinking of committing crimes of violence or using weapons in the commission of crimes." Before Sullivan announced the policy change, individual federal prosecutors could take advantage of "sentencing enhancements" at their own discretion. One, known as an "851 information" after the federal statute that created it, increases the mandatory minimum sentence for drug dealers with previous felony drug convictions. The other way to add years to a sentence is to charge the defendant with using a firearm in connection with a crime of violence, which can increase a prison term by five years. Now, prosecutors in Sullivan's office are required to deploy the enhancements in every case where they apply, without exception. "Michael Sullivan sits there knowing that it's politically correct, that it makes for great press for a politician or prosecutor to say no to plea bargaining and to demand enhanced sentences," said defense lawyer Kevin Reddington. Between 1997 and 2001, when he left office, US Attorney Donald K. Stern raised the federal drug caseload from one-third to more than 44 percent of the defendants his office prosecuted. Last year, 235 people were sentenced for drug trafficking in the federal district of Massachusetts. Since 1999, the number of federal drug traffickers sentenced in Massachusetts has increased by 30 percent - more than three times the national rate. For defense lawyers, Sullivan's move dramatically alters the playing field. "This war on crime has politicized our justice system, and it's moved awesome powers from judges, who held them for hundreds of years, to prosecutors," defense lawyer Martin G. Weinberg said. The federal sentencing guidelines adopted in 1987 removed much of federal judges' discretion, but they can still in extraordinary circumstances grant leniency or sentence a defendant more harshly than required. However, judges cannot depart from mandatory minimum sentences in any case. Prosecutors can appeal any departure from the sentencing guidelines. US District Judge Nancy Gertner has been an outspoken critic of the sentencing guidelines, which she says put the prosecutor "alone in the driver's seat." "The prosecutor has the ability, just by the way he or she charges a defendant, to bypass the more stringent mechanisms of proof under the Constitution," she wrote recently. As a result, judges are often forced to mete out sentences by "doing the math" dictated by the 900-page sentencing guidelines, she said, resulting in sentences that far too often are not just. The two enhancements that have recently become standard in Massachusetts affect a defendant's "mandatory minimum" sentence. For instance, the mandatory sentence for selling at least 1 kilogram of heroin would be 10 years in prision. If, however, prosecutors file notice that the defendant has a prior felony drug conviction, the minimum penalty jumps to 20 years. For two prior felony drug convictions, the minimum sentence is life. For Sullivan the sentencing change was a no-brainer. "The fact of the matter is, the more violent offenders you send to prison for a longer period of time, the better chance you have of reducing your crime rate," he said. Privately, some prosecutors in the US attorney's office grumble that the policy change forces them to seek enormous sentences in cases where the circumstances don't justify it. "It's politics," one prosecutor said. A former Massachusetts state representative and one-time challenger to US Senator Edward Kennedy, Sullivan is widely believed to hold political ambitions. "He acts like he's still running for office," said one lawyer who regularly practices in federal court. Sullivan shrugs off such criticism, insisting that he's just trying to make the US attorney's office as efficient and effective as possible, even if it provokes criticism. "This has nothing to do with politics," he said. "Any time you make a decision, there will be someone on the sideline who anonymously will criticize you. It improves public safety, and beyond that, it sends a message to others." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake