Pubdate: Thu, 10 Apr 2003 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2003 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 Author: Anne Gearan, Associated Press HIGH COURT JUSTICE SAYS TOO MANY IN US PRISONS WASHINGTON - Too many people are behind bars in America, and prison terms are often too long, Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy told Congress yesterday. As of June 30, 2002, there were 2.1 million inmates in prisons or jails, an increase of 2.8 percent from the year before. ''Two million people in prison is just unacceptable,'' Kennedy said during a hearing on the Supreme Court's budget. Justice Clarence Thomas nodded in apparent agreement as Kennedy criticized the proliferation of ''mandatory minimum'' sentences, which can mean long prison terms for relatively minor or nonviolent crimes. Thomas did not speak at the hearing. ''In many cases, our sentences are too long,'' Kennedy said. The comments were made after Kennedy and Thomas had asked the House Appropriations Committee for $73.4 million for salaries, upkeep, and court expenses for the 12 months that begin in October. Kennedy is a moderate conservative named to the high court by President Reagan in 1988. He voted last month to uphold sentences of up to life in prison for three-time convicts in California. None of the congressmen yesterday asked about that ruling, in which Thomas also upheld long prison terms. ''Mandatory minimums are harsh and in many cases unjust,'' Kennedy said. He offered a hypothetical example of an 18-year-old who gets caught growing marijuana in the woods. If the person happens to have a hunting rifle in their truck when arrested, the teenager could face a mandatory minimum sentence of 15 years, Kennedy said. ''Now, he shouldn't be doing that,'' Kennedy said, ''[but] an 18-year-old doesn't know how long 15 years is.'' Kennedy's language was unusually strong, said Marc Mauer of the Sentencing Project, a nonprofit group that advocates alternatives to long prison terms. Nonetheless, the remarks probably do not represent any lessened commitment to a law-and-order approach to serious crime, Mauer said. Kennedy was probably reflecting frustration common among federal judges who feel that mandatory minimum sentences are too inflexible, Mauer said. Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist has underscored that mandatory sentencing laws can unduly tie a judge's hands. He once called such laws ''a good example of the law of unintended consequences.'' ''Even though they represent what is usually thought of as the conservative wing of the court, when it comes to the appropriate role of the judiciary there is much less distinction between liberal and conservative judges,'' Mauer said. States and the federal government passed many laws setting mandatory minimum sentences for drug crimes in the mid-to late-1980s. The laws reflected concern over the growth of drug crime and the spread of crack cocaine. Other mandatory minimum sentencing laws, like the ''three strikes'' laws in California and other states, were meant to keep career criminals behind bars. Earlier in yesterday's session, Kennedy said the Supreme Court is not likely to make a habit of releasing audiotapes of its oral argument sessions on the same day a case is heard, as the court did April 1 in a marquee case about affirmative action. Kennedy also said the court's current workload is too light. The court has heard about 80 cases a year in recent terms, far fewer than a decade or more ago. That could change soon, especially as a large number of cases ''related to terrorism'' make their way through the courts, Kennedy said. He did not elaborate. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek