Pubdate: Sun, 03 Feb 2008
Source: Houston Chronicle (TX)
Copyright: 2008 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper
Contact:  http://www.chron.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198
Author: Michelle Mittelstadt, Houston Chronicle Washington Bureau
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues)

JACKSON LEE SAYS STRICT SENTENCING COSTS SOCIETY

Lawmaker Wants To Eliminate Bias In Crack Cases And Boost Treatment

WASHINGTON -- The tough-on-crime crackdown of the 1980s  and 1990s is 
getting a second look in Congress.

Some lawmakers, including Houston Rep. Sheila Jackson  Lee, are 
questioning whether the soaring incarceration  rates brought about by 
changes in federal sentencing  laws have actually deterred crimes.

Jackson Lee and other lawmakers argue that the  sentencing-law 
changes enacted during the crack cocaine  epidemic of the Reagan 
years have become a financial  burden to taxpayers and a societal 
cost in lives lost  behind bars.

The longer mandatory sentences have disproportionately  affected 
African-American defendants, the lawmakers  say. Eighty-five percent 
of the 19,500 federal inmates  convicted of crack-cocaine-related 
crimes are black.

Jackson Lee, who serves on the House Judiciary  Committee's crime 
subcommittee, is part of the vanguard  re-examining a criminal 
justice system that has seen  the federal prison population double 
from 1.1 million  inmates in 1990 to 2.3 million today. During a 
similar period, the violent crime rate declined from 729 crimes  per 
100,000 people in 1990 to 469 in 2005, the FBI  says.

The Houston Democrat has introduced several bills on  the topic, 
including one backed by the American Civil  Liberties Union and 
sentencing-reform advocates. The  proposal would end the disparity in 
prison terms for  crack cocaine offenders, a majority of whom are 
black,  and powder cocaine users, who more often are white or  Hispanic.

"The Supreme Court and U.S. Sentencing Commission did  not make 
decisions about this disparity in a vacuum;  they made the decision 
to lessen this disparity because  it is clearly and profoundly 
unfair," said ACLU  legislative counsel Jesselyn McCurdy. "But real 
change  and real justice can only come if Congress acts now to  right 
these wrongs."

The momentum for change reaches beyond liberal  lawmakers and 
left-leaning interest groups. The Supreme  Court and the Sentencing 
Commission recently moved to  give judges more discretion in 
sentencing crack cocaine  offenders.

Harsher sentences

Still, mandatory minimum sentences  prompting prison terms 100 times 
harsher for crack  offenders than powder cocaine offenders remain on 
the  books.

Jackson Lee's bill would eliminate the sentence  disparities and 
abolish the five-year mandatory minimum  prison sentence for 
first-time possession of crack. It  also would increase funding for 
drug treatment programs  and focus federal law enforcement resources 
on major  drug dealers.

"There are thousands upon thousands of incarcerated  persons who have 
been adjudged unfairly," said Jackson  Lee, a former municipal court 
judge. "Both drugs are  destructive."

Blocking early release

Rep. Lamar Smith of San Antonio,  the top Republican on the Judiciary 
Committee, will be  among those standing in Jackson Lee's way. After 
the  Sentencing Commission's decision to allow judges to 
retroactively reduce crack offenders' sentences  slightly -- though 
not less than the mandatory minimums  -- Smith introduced his own 
legislation seeking to  block any early releases.

"In addition to endangering our communities, allowing  the early 
release of criminals back into society would  cripple our re-entry 
programs by overburdening  probation officers and flood the courts 
with additional  litigation," Smith said.

A different focus

Jackson Lee's proposal comes as many  Democrats on the House and 
Senate judiciary panels and  the Congressional Black Caucus are 
offering bills to  improve prisoner re-entry programs, expand job 
training  and increase mental health and substance abuse  programs.

"Focusing more money on incarceration cannot possibly  reduce the 
crime rate. What we have to do is invest  money where it makes some 
sense," Rep. Bobby Scott,  D-Va., who heads the Judiciary crime 
subcommittee, said  during a recent hearing.

Scott noted that the U.S. incarceration rate of 750  adults per 
100,000 population is the world's highest.  The average rate globally 
is 166 per 100,000 persons.

Jackson Lee, who also is pushing to cut prison rates by  half for 
nonviolent federal offenders who are over the  age of 45 and have 
served at least 50 percent of their  sentence, said she is hopeful 
that the new Democratic  majority in Congress will be able to prevail 
on  criminal justice changes.

"The question of liberty is so important to me, and the  question of 
having faith in the integrity of the  criminal justice system," she 
said. "There is a sense  of urgency to make right which has been 
wrong, to  improve what has not worked, and to find ways to 
rehabilitate, to protect the American public from crime  but at the 
same time give people a second chance."

Her views are far from universally shared.

Jackson Lee acknowledged the legislation faces a strong  challenge, 
though the congresswoman said she has high  hopes of getting it into 
law this year.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom