Pubdate: Thu, 15 Nov 2007 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 2007 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotte.com/observer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78 Author: Tom Teepen MAKE REFORM OF CRACK SENTENCES RETROACTIVE Harsher Penalties For One Form Of Cocaine Never Had Moral Basis What do you call the idea of turning nearly 20,000 drug criminals loose from prison two years or more before they've served their full sentences? A good start. The U.S. Sentencing Commission recently lowered its sentencing guidelines for offenses involving crack cocaine to bring them in line with the sentences involving powder cocaine. Simple possession of just 5 grams of crack -- less than two of those little sugar packs on restaurant tables -- has carried a five-year mandatory sentence. You had to get caught with 500 grams of powder to hit the five-year mandatory. Now the commission is apparently on the verge of making the adjustment retroactive. The commission in the past also tweaked LSD, OxyContin and other drug sentences when faddish politics had thrown them out of whack. Judges and civil rights organizations have long protested the disparity in crack and powder sentences and guidelines, and the Criminal Law Committee of the U.S. Judicial Conference has supported applying the changes to current crack prisoners. There is no moral basis for levying draconian sentences on one group while levying lesser, more proportionate sentences on another for the same crimes. Hysteria bloats sentences The grossly skewed sentences are the product of hysteria about crack in the 1980s that demagogic politics enthusiastically riled up and then serviced with grandstanding crackdowns, as clamoring pols outbid one another in the severity of the prison sentences they were promoting.The consequences have been especially devastating in the black community, with ill effects that have rippled through the whole society. Scores of thousands of men, mainly, have been unnecessarily burdened with prison records that have made them near-hopeless prospects for employment or marriage. Cheaper than powder cocaine, crack became the drug of the poor, with the result that some 81 percent of crack prisoners are African American -- although two-thirds of users are white and Hispanic. And blacks serve an average 57 months for drug offenses, nearly equal the average 61 months whites serve for violent crimes. Making crack and powder sentencing congruent is a step years overdue, but welcome as the step is, it is only a small one toward a broadly sensible and effective engagement with the drug challenge. Prevention, not prison The futility of essentially just criminalizing the issue ought to be apparent to everyone by now. As documented by The Sentencing Project, an estimable advocacy group, drug offenders account for more than half of federal prisoners and have overwhelmed state prisons. Even so, drug arrests hit a record 1.8 million in 2005. Except where there's attendant violence or commercial-level trafficking, drug policy should emphasize prevention, education and treatment. All of those have been effective in the relatively rare instances in which they have been seriously applied. After generations of failed criminalization, isn't it about time to begin doing what we know actually makes a difference for the better? - --- MAP posted-by: Derek