Pubdate: Fri, 29 Aug 2003 Source: City Paper, The (TN) Copyright: 2003, The City Paper,LLC Contact: http://www.nashvillecitypaper.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3080 Author: Cokie Roberts and Steven Roberts Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/ashcroft.htm (Ashcroft, John) SENTENCING MODIFICATION GAINS SOME UNLIKELY ALLIES A senior federal judge had this to say recently about criminal justice in America: "Our resources are misspent, our punishments too severe, our sentences too long." The problem, he added, is a system of sentencing guidelines and mandatory criminal penalties enacted by Congress that simply does not work to reduce crime or protect citizens. "In too many cases, mandatory minimum sentences are unwise or unjust," the jurist explained. These are not the words of some bleeding-heart liberal. In fact, they were spoken by Justice Anthony Kennedy, a reliably conservative voice on the Supreme Court who was appointed by Ronald Reagan. What makes Justice Kennedy's argument so striking is that it directly contradicts the current policies of the Bush administration and its leading voice on criminal justice issues, Attorney General John Ashcroft. Ashcroft is determined to do exactly the opposite of what Kennedy recommends by increasing penalties. Last spring, at Ashcroft's prodding, Congress passed a law urging a crackdown on judges who regularly issue sentences that are more lenient than the federal guidelines. Ashcroft then followed up a few weeks ago by directing the federal court administrator to start keeping records detailing the performance of these judges. This campaign represents a triumph of rigid ideology over practical reality. Many judges and prosecutors side with Justice Kennedy in this dispute. But in the current climate, it is impossible for Congress to stand up to Ashcroft and risk being branded soft on crime. In the mid-1980s, Congress first enacted federal sentencing guidelines. Since then, the federal prison population has increased almost fivefold, and the total number of prisoners in all jurisdictions now tops 2 million. To put this figure into perspective, one out of every 143 Americans is in jail compared to 1 out of every 1,000 citizens in European countries like England and Italy. But that is not enough for Ashcroft. He's still furious that in nearly 35 percent of all federal criminal cases last year, the sentences fell below official guidelines. In Ashcroft's world, mercy borders on the immoral. Since federal judges are appointed for life, Ashcroft can't remove any of his targets. But he can make their lives miserable. This very point was made by Chief Justice William Rehnquist, hardly a criminal-coddler, who warned that the attorney general's campaign "could amount to an unwarranted and ill-considered effort to intimidate individual judges." It would be one thing if longer sentences and less judicial discretion actually reduced crime. But in the view of Ashcroft's critics, the very opposite is true. Listen to Judge John S. Martin Jr., appointed to the federal bench by the first President Bush, who has denounced the current sentencing system as "unnecessarily cruel and rigid." On National Public Radio, Judge Martin maintained that in many cases, "we're warehousing people who are dangerous to no one." A smarter idea, he says, is using the money now spent on imprisoning nonviolent criminals to bolster police patrols and expand drug rehabilitation programs. Justice Kennedy concedes that some prisoners are incorrigible criminals. However, he adds: "We must try to bridge the gap between proper skepticism about rehabilitation on one hand and improper refusal to acknowledge that the more than 2 million inmates in the United States are human beings whose minds and spirits we must try to reach." That's not a popular message today. The "lock 'em up and throw away the key" crowd is riding high in Washington. But conservative jurists like Kennedy, Rehnquist and Martin think there's a better way to make our streets safer, and they deserve to be heard. Cokie Roberts and Steven V. Roberts are syndicated columnists. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh