Pubdate: Fri, 28 Aug 2015 Source: Tampa Tribune (FL) Copyright: 2015 The Tribune Co. Contact: http://tbo.com/list/news-opinion-letters/submit/ Website: http://tbo.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/446 EASE DRUG SENTENCES CAUTIOUSLY A new federal program that reduces drug offenders' long sentences should cut costs and improve the judicial system. But the exercise requires close monitoring. No one should forget the culprits were sent to prison for grave crimes. The drug trade, after all, kills thousands each year - users and those killed in the violent street crimes related to drugs. Illegal drugs' devastating damage to society should not be minimized as federal officials ease sentencing practices. But, as the Tribune's Elaine Silvestrini found, the Justice Department's Smart on Crime Initiative looks to be a reasonable way to reduce inordinately long sentences without giving criminals a pass. As she writes, it 'includes an increase in clemency reviews and a retroactive change in sentencing guidelines for drug convictions, known as Drugs Minus 2, allowing most drug offenders to receive lower sentences.' Silvestrini details the case of two Miami commercial fishermen, a father and son, who each received 30-year sentences after being convicted of seeking to distribute more than five kilos of cocaine in Tampa. The program will allow them to be released after serving 22 years, which is hardly getting off easy. The men had no prior convictions, nor had they caused any problems in prison. What's important here is that they have suffered serious consequences. The 30-year sentences seem excessive, but five kilos can be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. This was not a trivial offense. Members of both political parties are, rightly, backing off supporting the long mandatory sentences that were adopted to fight runaway crime in the 1980s. Even the Koch brothers have joined forces with President Barack Obama on the issue. Obama recently commuted the sentences of 46 nonviolent drug offenders, including 11 Floridians. Many were serving 20 years or more. But as society backs away from long sentences, we should not forget the importance of holding criminals accountable. We remember the wildfire of crime that ignited in Florida when inmates were released early due to overcrowding. Even violent offenders served but a fraction of their sentences. There is no getting around the simple fact that the surest way to protect society from vicious offenders is to keep them behind bars a long time. But that doesn't mean every criminal poses the same threat to society. Unbending sentences, particularly for nonviolent crimes, that don't address individual circumstances can be unjust and needlessly ruin lives while costing taxpayers billions. The nation spends about $80 billion a year keeping 2.2 million people behind bars. Florida spends more than $2.2 billion a year imprisoning 100,000 inmates. Federal Public Defender Donna Elm told Silvestrini the new Drugs Minus 2 policy would save taxpayers in the Middle District of Florida, which includes Hillsborough County, more than $21 million by cutting 695 years from prison sentences. To be sure, there is another side to the equation: Every year about 40,000 Americans die from illegal drug overdoses, and perhaps 1,000 or more are killed in homicides related to drug-trafficking. There is no way to determine how many lives - and families - are destroyed by addictions sustained by the drug trade. Keeping drug smugglers off the streets has cost benefits not reflected in prison expenses. So a balance must be maintained as government revises its policies. The Drug Minus 2 program is expected to result in the early release of 240 inmates by the end of the year, a number that will eventually increase to 1,500. It'll be important to attend law enforcement officers' reports on whether the policy leads to more crime and more drug transactions. But such considerations shouldn't keep government from easing off unsparing sentences that keep people locked up years more than is necessary. Taxpayers and society should benefit from a policy that offers a chance for redemption to offenders who have been sufficiently punished. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom