Pubdate: Sat, 06 Apr 2002 Source: Rome News-Tribune (GA) Copyright: 2002sRome News-Tribune Contact: http://www.romenews-tribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1716 Author: Chicago Tribune Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) BUSH POSITION CRACKS Shortly after his election, President Bush offered hope that the gross and, in their impact, racially discriminatory differences between mandatory sentences for crimes involving powder and crack cocaine might be narrowed. Now senior Justice Department officials are trying to minimize the gap's significance. Unfortunately their conclusions show more confidence than evidence. In recent testimony before the U.S. Sentencing Commission, Deputy Atty. Gen. Larry Thompson turned the usual arguments on their head. He agreed that harsher penalties for crack dealt a more severe punishment to the poor blacks and Latinos who disproportionately sell and use crack. But he offered that the difference benefits other, law-abiding blacks and Latinos by providing a greater deterrent to a scourge that has ravaged their communities. If anything, said Thompson, who is black, the sentences for powder cocaine should be raised instead of lowering the penalties for crack, as some reformers suggest. It is unarguable that sentencing guidelines look with greater harshness on possession of crack, a processed form of cocaine. Not that there may not be differences between the two which may make crack a somewhat more serious threat to users. Some researchers think that, because it is typically smoked rather than snorted, crack's chemical components may be ingested more efficiently, which may make crack the more addictive substance. But the differences in the two forms of cocaine don't appear to be as dramatic as the guidelines would suggest. Example: If you're arrested with five grams of powder cocaine, you may well get probation. Five grams of crack typically brings a five-year prison sentence. As for raising penalties for powder cocaine, even Thompson conceded there is "no evidence that existing powder penalties are too low." Instead, there is evidence that crack has become a less provocative problem than it was in the fiercely violent years that followed its appearance on U.S. streets in the 1980s. Harsher crack penalties were created in response to outbreaks of open warfare between rival street gangs over crack markets in the late 1980s. When drug traffic stabilized by the early 1990s, its associated violence dropped off, contributing to an overall drop in violent crime by the mid-1990s, and now to its lowest levels since the 1960s. Nevertheless, prisons continued to fill with crack offenders, many of whom had no record of more serious crimes. To be fair, there is a chicken-and-egg argument to be had here; some crime researchers believe the crack-driven epidemic of violence subsided in part because so many sellers and users were hauled off to jail. But it has become increasingly apparent that harsher crack sentences resulted, with the best of intentions, not so much from the possible differences in the potency or addictiveness of crack versus powder, but primarily because of the sale of crack in poor neighborhoods where crime was more prevalent. In January, 2001, Bush suggested the crack and powder cocaine penalties should be the same. He also said, "I think a lot of people are coming to the realization that maybe long minimum sentences for first-time users may not be the best way to occupy jail space and or heal people for their disease. And I'm willing to look at that." Republican Sens. Orrin Hatch of Utah and Jeff Sessions of Alabama have proposed reducing the disparity by raising the amount of crack--and reducing the amount of powder cocaine--that would mandate a five-year sentence. The Bush administration should huddle with lawmakers to re-examine the cocaine sentencing gap and, one way or another, reduce it. New drug policies need to be based on more than the heated emotions of a dreary and violent past. Above all, the principle of equality under the law must be pursued and preserved. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh