Pubdate: Thu, 27 Dec 2007
Source: Valley Advocate (Easthampton, MA)
Copyright: 2007 New Mass Media
Contact:  http://www.valleyadvocate.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1520
Author: Stephanie Kraft
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing)

FIRST SHOT: CRACK-DOWN LETS UP

A Supreme Court Decision Attacks Inequity In The Drug Sentencing Guidelines.

The U.S.'s system of checks and balances is under  seige, but it was 
still lurching along late in December  as the Supreme Court 
disappointed the White House with  a ruling in a crack case. In a 7-2 
decision, the  justices said judges did not have to stick to federal 
guidelines that prescribe the same sentence for the  sale of five 
grams of crack as for the sale of 500  grams of powdered cocaine.

The 100-to-1 ratio has long been the target of outraged  protests by 
people opposing mandatory minimum  sentences, and by black community 
leaders and  lawmakers, who often had the crack laws in mind when 
they said that the war on drugs was really a war on  young black men.

Among the latter is state Rep. Ben Swan of Springfield,  who has been 
fighting the disparity ever since the law  mandating it was passed in 
1986. It was an  opportunistic measure, pushed through without much 
study after basketball star Len Bias's death from an  overdose of 
cocaine sparked a move by Democrats-led by  legendary Rep. Tip 
O'Neill of Massachusetts-to one-up  the Republicans by appearing 
tough on drugs. By 1995,  hundreds of black people had been charged 
with crack-related crimes under the law, but no white  people.

That year the U.S. Sentencing Commission recommended  reducing the 
100-to-1 disparity, but Congress refused.  In 2002 the Commission 
repeated the recommendation,  pointing out that facts did not bear 
out the alleged  connection between crack and violence that had 
been  used as an argument for the disparity.

In the year 2000, the Commission found, 75 percent of  crack 
offenders had used no weapons. Furthermore, its  inquiries showed, 
crack arrests seldom netted important  figures in the drug trade. 
Other findings cast doubt on  earlier beliefs that crack was vastly 
more addictive than powdered cocaine.

But a major concern of the Commission was that "the  overwhelming 
majority of offenders subject to the  heightened crack cocaine 
penalties are black, about 85  percent in 2000. This has contributed 
to a widely held  perception that the current penalties structure 
promotes unwarranted disparity based on race."

Front and center in the case that brought the High  Court's new 
ruling was a black man, Derrick Kimbrough,  who had been convicted on 
charges involving crack and  powdered cocaine in Virginia. The 
guidelines called for  a prison term of 19 to 22 years because of the 
crack;  the trial judge gave Kimbrough 15 years, citing 
the  Commission's concerns that the crack law is most often  applied 
to minor offenders, especially minority  members. A federal appeals 
court struck down the judge's ruling, but the Supreme Court held that 
the  judge had not abused his discretion.

On his way home from the Conference of the National  Caucus of Black 
State Legislators in Little Rock, Ark.,  Swan called the Advocate to 
say that the Supreme Court  ruling was "a major move in improving the 
criminal  justice system." The notoriously disproportionate 
100-to-one ratio was politically unassailable in its  early years, 
Swan said: "Some of us have been trying to  change these sentencing 
guidelines and we had  difficulty because there are people in both 
parties who  fear being seen as soft on crime."

And it wasn't just a liberal vs. conservative issue, he  explained: 
"It is the quasi-conservatives that I have  trouble with. If you are 
truly conservative, you will  try to correct disparities in the law. 
I've been  fighting this for 15 years or more. Sometimes we 
live  long enough to see progress made."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom