Pubdate: Thu, 06 Nov 2003 Source: Bergen Record (NJ) Copyright: 2003 Bergen Record Corp. Contact: http://www.bergen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/44 Author: Associated Press Cited: Drug Policy Alliance www.drugpolicy.org Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) REFORMERS ASSAIL N.J. DRUG LAWS NEWARK - New Jersey leads the nation in the proportion of prison inmates jailed for non-violent drug offenses, as a result of punitive, inflexible laws that are burdensome to taxpayers and ineffective in curbing drug abuse, a reform group says. The Washington-based Drug Policy Alliance said, in a report to be released today, that 36 percent of New Jersey's 28,000 prison inmates are serving sentences for drug crimes, compared with the national average of 20 percent. The group quoted figures from the New Jersey state Department of Corrections as of June 2002. "I think it's a combination of having tough and inflexible laws," said Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the alliance, which favors treatment programs, rather than prison, for non-violent offenders. Nadelmann said New Jersey's drug sentencing laws were last amended in 1986. One factor cited was New Jersey's law requiring that convicts serve 85 percent of their sentences, regardless of the nature of their crime or their behavior behind bars. The alliance estimated that the state's drug-related inmate population costs $266 million a year, more than what a third of all states spend on their entire prison populations. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin