Pubdate: Mon, 9 Nov 2009 Source: Hawk Eye, The (Burlington, IA) Copyright: 2009 The Hawk Eye Contact: http://spanky.thehawkeye.com/forms/letters.html Website: http://www.thehawkeye.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/934 Author: Christinia Crippes Cited: The Senate Judiciary Committee http://judiciary.senate.gov/ Referenced: The National Criminal Justice Commission Act http://drugsense.org/url/tnFxcd6f GRASSLEY PROPOSING LIMITS TO FEDERAL DRUG STUDY Voting Delay Leaves More Time for Potential Changes to Bill. In the eyes of Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., the statistics are staggering. The United States houses 25 percent of the world's prison population, with just 5 percent of the world population. And in less than 30 years, drug offenders in prison have increased 1,200 percent. To study why that is, and perhaps change those facts and figures, Webb proposed a National Criminal Justice Commission. The legislation, which has 34 cosponsors from senators on both sides of the aisle, was sent to the Senate Judiciary Committee, which was expected to vote on it Thursday. Instead, the bill but was held over for future consideration. The delay will give Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, more time to consider which, if any, amendments to offer to the proposed legislation. During a conference call with reporters last week, Grassley, who is a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee and co-chairman of the international narcotics control caucus, said he had circulated several amendments with the intention of offering a couple of them. While Grassley said an amendment to prohibit the commission from studying the legalization or decriminalization of drugs was not one he planned to offer, it has earned the ire of the blogosphere, including the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws and Law Enforcement Against Prohibition. "Well, my intent on that amendment isn't any different than any other amendments that are coming up," Grassley said. "The Congress is setting up a commission to study certain things, and the commission is an arm of Congress ... and the point is for them to do what we tell them to do. "And one of the things I was anticipating telling them not to do is to recommend or study the legalization of drugs." Grassley said the prohibition would include the decriminalization of marijuana for medical purposes, something the Iowa Legislature could consider during its 2010 session after an interim committee studied the issue. "I see the drive toward legalization of marijuana as being a cover for the distribution of marijuana illegally, other than for medical purposes," Grassley said previously. According to a floor statement from Webb on last week -- prior to the expected committee vote -- one of the seven tasks the committee is meant to consider is specifically a "review of our drug policy and its impact on incarceration, crime and sentencing." The commission's other tasks include studying why the incarceration rates have increased; determining costs of prison policies at all governmental levels; identify the impact of drug activities; and examine policies as they relate to mentally ill. According to Webb's Web site, four times as many mentally ill people are in prisons than in mental health hospitals. Grassley said, however, the commission's scope of study can be whatever Congress decides it should be. He said the commission's results and recommendations could be the basis for future legislation. Iowa's senior senator has long been a champion of anti-drug laws. According to Grassley's Web site, "For the past decade, I've used my leadership positions ... to advance public policy that curbs trafficking, production and consumption of illegal drugs, beefs up enforcement and promotes effective treatment and prevention methods." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake