Pubdate: Mon, 17 Dec 2007
Source: New York Times (NY)
Column: Sidebar
Copyright: 2007 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Adam Liptak
Cited: The Sentencing Project http://www.sentencingproject.org
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?244 (Sentencing - United States)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Sentencing+Commission
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

WHITTLING AWAY, BUT LEAVING A GAP

There was an avalanche of sentencing news last week. The Supreme 
Court gave trial judges more power to show mercy, the United States 
Sentencing Commission gave almost 20,000 prisoners doing time on 
crack cocaine charges a good shot at early release, and even 
President Bush commuted a crack sentence.

The net effect: tinkering.

The United States justice system remains, by international standards 
at least, exceptionally punitive. And nothing that happened last week 
will change that.

Even the sentencing commission's striking move on Tuesday, meant to 
address the wildly disproportionate punishments for crack and powder 
cocaine, will have only a minor impact. Unless Congress acts, many 
thousands of defendants will continue to face vastly different 
sentences for possessing and selling different types of the same thing.

Crack and powder cocaine are two forms of the same drug. But, under 
the old guidelines, a drug dealer selling crack cocaine was subject 
to the same sentence as one selling 100 times as much powder.

Street dealers selling crack got much longer sentences than the 
wholesalers who sold them the powder they used to make it. 
Eighty-five percent of people convicted of crack offenses are black.

After the recent amendments to the guidelines, the ratios vary from 
80 to 1 to 25 to 1, and the average sentence for crack offenses 
dropped by about 15 months, to a little less than 9 years. On 
Tuesday, the commission made the changes retroactive. The final 
sentencing decisions will be up to federal judges, newly empowered to 
do as they wish.

But only to a point. Neither the commission nor judges can do 
anything about the mandatory minimum sentences that retain the same 
disparities. The sentences are required by a 1986 law, enacted when 
crack was new, terrifying and seemingly unstoppable. Only Congress 
can change it.

Paul G. Cassell, an authority on sentencing who was until recently a 
federal trial judge, said the focus on the sentencing guidelines was 
in some ways a distraction.

"The mandatory minimums are so draconian," he said. "I'm a believer 
in a good guidelines system. And I would much rather trade a much 
tougher guidelines system and get rid of mandatory minimums."

The mandatory minimum sentence for crimes involving five grams of 
crack -- a little more than a sugar packet -- remains five years. For 
powder, the five-year mandatory sentence does not kick in until 500 
grams, or more than a pound.

Fifty grams of crack equals a guaranteed 10 years. It takes five 
kilograms of powder to mandate the same sentence. Five kilos is a lot 
of cocaine.

Mere possession of a relatively small quantity of crack means a 
five-year sentence. Possessing five grams of powder cocaine usually 
results in probation, said Marc Mauer, the executive director of the 
Sentencing Project, a research and advocacy group.

Indeed, the maximum sentence for simple possession of any drug but 
crack, including powder cocaine and heroin, is one year.

There are several bills kicking around Congress meant to harmonize 
cocaine sentencing laws. But, perhaps perversely, the Supreme Court's 
decisions last Monday may make Congressional action less likely. 
Letting judges have too much discretion does not sit well with some 
legislators, and that discretion can be controlled through mandatory minimums.

"It's going to be more difficult to make the case for repeal of 
mandatory minimums across the board when judges are viewed as having 
too much discretion," said Professor Cassell, who now teaches law at 
the University of Utah and works on behalf of crime victims.

It is hardly clear, moreover, that judges are itching to employ their 
new discretion even in the context of the guidelines. Many judges say 
that sentencing is the hardest part of the job. It wears on the soul.

"Somehow I felt it was wrong for one human being to have that much 
power over another," Judge Alex Kozinski, now the chief judge of the 
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, in San 
Francisco, wrote of the days before the guidelines were in force and 
judges had vast discretion. Writing in The Federal Sentencing 
Reporter in 1999, he said the experience was so traumatic as to feel 
like "almost an act of sacrilege."

The guidelines were a sort of relief, Judge Kozinski said. They 
established relatively narrow ranges and "presumably take into 
account all those factors I don't feel competent to weigh: 
punishment, deterrence, rehabilitation, harm to society, contrition 
- -- they're all engineered into the machine; all I have to do is wind the key."

Last week's most curious sentencing decision came from Mr. Bush, who 
commuted the sentence of Michael D. Short a few hours after the 
Supreme Court ruled. It was only the fifth commutation of his 
presidency, and the first involving crack cocaine.

Mr. Short had served 15 years for aiding a crack cocaine ring. Mr. 
Bush, without explanation, ordered him released in February, a little 
more than a year before he was to get out anyway.

Margaret Colgate Love, the pardon lawyer at the Justice Department 
for most of the 1990s, seemed eager to read a lot into the decision.

"The president's personal intervention to cut short Short's prison 
term sends a clear signal that he, too, is concerned about the 
excessive length of crack sentences," Ms. Love said. The decision, 
she said, "puts him on the side of the courts and the angels, and in 
opposition to Congress and his own Justice Department."

On the other hand, she conceded, maybe it was just a random act of kindness. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake