Pubdate: Mon, 28 Jun 2004 Source: Winston-Salem Journal (NC) Copyright: 2004 Piedmont Publishing Co. Inc. Contact: http://www.journalnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/504 Note: The Journal does not publish letters from writers outside its daily home delivery circulation area. TOUGH SENTENCES Americans favor tough criminal sentences, especially when they come with mandatory minimums. But those sentences are very expensive to taxpayers, and they don't always provide society with the best protection. That is the conclusion of a study conducted by the American Bar Association over the past year and released on Wednesday. The ABA conducted the study in the aftermath of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy's rebuke last year of the criminal sentencing systems in effect at the federal and state levels. Kennedy appropriately charged that mandatory minimum sentences are often too harsh and that they take away a judge's flexibility to match punishment and offense. At the crux of the ABA report is the determination that resources are being wasted on lengthy, costly incarceration for people who do not need to be locked up for long terms. The ABA correctly argues that many convicts can be punished with shorter sentences or alternatives to incarceration. Judges have the sense to appropriately sentence offenders, but their authority to do so has been steadily eroded over the past two decades by laws with mandatory minimum sentences. North Carolina's criminal sentences, for example, are established on a grid with judges given little leeway within a very small range of sentences. Kennedy, a Reagan appointee, argued that justice is not being served by harsh sentences and that the country has become morally blind on the topic. He has been especially critical of mandatory minimums for some drug offenses. As state legislatures and the Congress have moved to more and more mandatory sentencing, the nation's crime rate has steadily dropped while the prison population has skyrocketed. The president of the ABA recently noted that there are 2.1 million people in American prisons. That's one quarter of all people in prison worldwide. North Carolina has seen its prison population double in the last 20 years, and steps taken by the General Assembly this year are almost certain to create more demand for prison space. The legislature is moving to toughen penalties for production and possession of methamphetamine and it has already toughened domestic-violence laws. Meth production and domestic violence are crimes that should be punished severely, but some North Carolina lawmakers have argued for years that the state has long sentences for some non-violent crimes that could be reduced significantly. Those sentences mean a continuing drain on taxpayer resources and, most likely, a shortage of funds to fight crime in other ways. Legislators should take the ABA report, and Kennedy's remarks, very seriously as they face the growing demand for new prisons. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh