Pubdate: Thu, 1 Jan 2009
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Page: A01, Front Page
Copyright: 2009 The Washington Post Company
Contact:  http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491
Author: Del Quentin Wilber, Washington Post Staff Writer

NEW SENTENCING GUIDELINES FOR CRACK, NEW CHALLENGES

Michael D. Thompson, a former crack cocaine dealer, thought he 
deserved a break.

Sentenced in 2000 to 15 years and eight months in prison, Thompson 
asked a federal judge in the District to release him, arguing that he 
had received an unfair sentence and has turned his life around behind 
bars, earning a general equivalency diploma and completing a 
commercial driving course.

Federal prosecutors said that was a terrible idea. Citing Thompson's 
criminal past and prison disciplinary record, which includes 
threatening a prison official with a knife, prosecutors argued in 
court papers that the 37-year-old poses a danger to the community and 
should complete his sentence.

Thompson's case is one of thousands around the country in which crack 
offenders and their defense attorneys are sparring with federal 
prosecutors over how to interpret new sentencing guidelines for crack 
possession or sale. The guidelines were issued to right old wrongs. 
But they have led to time-consuming legal challenges dealing with the 
often long-forgotten consequences of the bloody crack wars in the 
late 1980s and 1990s.

Defense lawyers say they are correcting systemic sentencing flaws 
that removed their clients, mostly black men, from their communities 
for too many years. Federal prosecutors say they are working to 
prevent bad guys from returning to the streets to wreak more havoc. 
Both sides say they are seeking justice.

"Justice isn't easy and justice isn't always about the simplest and 
most efficient solution, and sometimes it requires getting down in 
the dirt, and that is what we are doing in these cases now," said 
Michael S. Nachmanoff, the federal public defender for the Eastern 
District of Virginia, who has filed hundreds of applications to 
reduce crack sentences.

The legal fights stem from a decision last year by the U.S. 
Sentencing Commission to amend guidelines and reduce prison time for 
crack offenders. Advocates, defense lawyers and judges say sentencing 
laws are unfair because of a massive disparity in punishment between 
crack cocaine and powder cocaine. A person convicted of distributing 
five grams of crack, for example, draws the same mandatory minimum 
five-year sentence as someone convicted of distributing 500 grams of 
powder cocaine. The disparity was written into federal law in 1986 
and has been criticized for disproportionately affecting blacks.

The commission, an independent agency in the judicial branch that 
develops sentencing policy, modified its guidelines to lower the 
potential range of sentences. The commission has urged Congress to 
eliminate the sentencing disparity.

In March, over the Bush administration's objections, the commission's 
reductions were applied retroactively, allowing thousands of inmates 
to petition judges for shorter sentences.

 From March through the first week of December, federal judges in the 
Eastern District of Virginia and in Maryland granted more than 800 
such requests and denied about 490. Judges in the District have 
granted more than 160 and denied nine. Lawyers said Virginia's 
federal courts have received a large number of applications filed by 
inmates representing themselves, and many are not eligible for 
reductions. In the District, the federal public defender is 
coordinating the effort.

In weighing the requests, judges must evaluate several factors, 
including criminal records and the amount of crack the offenders were 
convicted of possessing or distributing. Then there are the 
intangibles. Some judges want a strong indication that offenders are 
remorseful for their conduct.

Nationally, federal judges reduced sentences by an average of two 
years, or 17 percent, for more than 12,000 crack offenders from March 
through early December, according to the commission. In Michael 
Thompson's case, a judge trimmed his sentence Dec. 17 by a little 
more than three years.

In many cases, prosecutors didn't contest the reductions because the 
convicts were near the end of their sentences. In others, prosecutors 
and defense attorneys agreed on reductions within the new guideline.

Thousands more cases remain, among them hundreds in Washington area 
federal courthouses. They have been more difficult to resolve, 
prosecutors and defense attorneys said.

"There are no generic cases, and these aren't widgets," said Gretchen 
C.F. Shappert, the U.S. attorney for the Western District of North 
Carolina and the Justice Department's point person on crack 
sentencing. "They present complicated issues, and each one is different."

Lawyers say some cases present such complex legal issues that they 
expect appeals.

Certain cases are so difficult that, even when prosecutors agree that 
an offender is a candidate for a reduction, both sides disagree on 
how much. Prosecutors say some convicts don't deserve much of a break 
because of bad conduct or criminal history. And some offenders, they 
say, deserve no leniency at all.

"We want to make sure that dangerous people are not being released 
too soon," said John P. Mannarino, acting chief of the special 
proceedings division of the U.S. attorney's office in the District. 
"We want to make sure that the reductions are appropriate."

Mary Manning Petras, an assistant federal public defender, has led 
the fight in U.S. District Court in Washington to reduce sentences 
for crack offenders. She has won earlier releases for more than 150 
and is working on scores of others, sometimes pursuing novel legal arguments.

She says she tries to get judges to understand how unfair crack 
sentences have been. One she cites is the case of Donnell O. Williams, 37.

Since age 11, Williams had been a member of the R Street Crew, a 
ruthless drug gang in Northeast Washington that made headlines in the 
early 1990s.

At a hearing before U.S. District Court Judge Thomas F. Hogan in 
October, Petras argued that Williams played a minor role in the gang 
and said prosecutors originally offered him a plea deal that would 
have capped his sentence at five years. But the agreement evaporated 
when a co-defendant refused to accept a similar deal, and Williams 
and four others were convicted at trial. He was sentenced to life.

Prosecutors conceded that Williams deserved some benefit from the 
commission's guideline changes. But they argued that Williams was an 
important cog in the gang, had carried guns and was present when 
other crew members committed violence. They said Hogan shouldn't 
reduce the sentence below 30 years, leaving Williams with about nine 
more years to serve.

By speakerphone during the hearing, Williams told Hogan that he 
wanted to be a productive citizen and "to have some more kids, get 
married and spend the rest of my days as an old man, a happy, free man."

"Your Honor, I was very stupid and I made some bad choices," he said. 
"I was young and I was crazy."

Last month, Hogan reduced Williams's sentence to 24 years. He has a 
little more than three years left to serve. "Going from life to just 
3 1/2 years in prison, that is a huge thing," Petras said. "That is 
very satisfying. You can't beat the feeling. You have this guy who 
has life, and now he will get out in his 40s. Amazing."

Other cases present more complicated legal arguments.

Ricardo E. Epps pleaded guilty in 1999 to distributing crack cocaine 
in a deal that required the judge to sentence him to more than 15 
years. Petras has argued in court papers that Epps would not have 
agreed to that sentence if there had been a lower guideline range and 
that he has served enough time. Prosecutors countered that a federal 
judge has no authority to undo such a deal.

The biggest legal issue facing the cases is whether judges can reduce 
sentences below the new guideline ranges. In 2005, the Supreme Court 
ruled that the guidelines, once mandatory, were only advisory. To 
appease concerns about sentence reductions being larger than intended 
under the new rules, the commission said judges could not resentence 
offenders to terms below the new ranges. But Petras has persuaded 
three judges to do just that, winning immediate release for two inmates.

Marvin Ragland, a 49-year-old crack dealer who was sentenced in 1998 
to more than 15 years in prison, was ordered released in August with 
time served. If the judge had reduced his sentence to the low end of 
the new guidelines, Ragland would have faced 18 more months behind bars.

"Those extra months mean a lot," said Ragland, who is living with his 
grandmother in Northeast Washington. "I'm home and I'm free. Every 
day matters." 
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