Pubdate: Tue, 26 Aug 2003 Source: Elizabethton Star (TN) Copyright: 2003 Elizabethton Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.starhq.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1478 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) RETHINKING LONG SENTENCES You can tell that a backlash against the nation's tough-on-crime legislative binge of the last two decades is for real by the conservatives helping to lead the charge. Take U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, a Reagan nominee, who spoke out the other day against mandatory minimum sentences for federal crimes. "Our resources are misspent, our punishments too severe, our sentences too long," Kennedy told the annual meeting of the American Bar Association. What's more, as USA Today reported recently, fiscal conservatives are spearheading the drive in many hard-pressed states to release non-violent offenders early, to send drug users to treatment centers in lieu of prison and to otherwise reduce sentences. Congress and state legislatures spent the 1980s and '90s toughening laws and lengthening sentences -- one reason the land of the free now leads the world in putting its citizens under lock and key. Some 2.1 million Americans are now behind bars. Worse, incarceration and crime reduction haven't correlated, except perhaps inversely. As a rough rule in the 1990s, states that led in prison expansion lagged in crime reduction. Wisconsin is a case in point. Sentencing guidelines, a federal practice, make sense, as Kennedy noted. They lead to consistency in treatment. But he argued correctly that the guidelines should be ratcheted downward. What's more, the minimum sentences should be advisory, not mandatory, as they are for some federal crimes. To avoid the miscarriage of justice that is too commonplace in the federal system, a judge deserves more discretion to tailor a sentence to the defendant's degree of culpability and other factors. One consequence of the tough-on-crime spree is that the ranks of elderly prisoners are swelling, as another USA Today article noted. A California study puts the cost of their confinement at two to three times that of average inmates. Of course, no one advocates the premature release of violent criminals, especially repeat offenders, and some inmates guilty of especially heinous crimes deserve to grow old and die in prison. But as a rule, the federal government and state legislatures stiffened laws recklessly. Now, the morning after, sober voices -- including conservative ones -- are calling for a rollback of these legislative excesses. For the sake of justice and fiscal sense, lawmakers should heed the sage advice. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin