Source: USA Today 04/30/97 Panel advises parity in cocaine sentencing The U.S. Sentencing Commission recommended Tuesday that Congress reduce the wide disparity between federal prison sentences for trafficking in crack and powder cocaine. "Although research and public policy may support higher penalties for crack than for powder cocaine, a 100to1 quantity ratio cannot be justified," the commission said. The advice addresses a racially charged issue: Crack cocaine, used mostly by blacks, nets a far stiffer sentence than powder cocaine, used mostly by whites and Hispanics. Federal law requires a fiveyear minimum sentence for people caught selling five or more grams of crack. However, someone convicted of trafficking powder cocaine would have to sell 500 grams or more to get the same sentence. Supporters of current sentencing guidelines argue that crack deserves stiffer penalties because it is linked to more street violence. A 1995 commission effort to have crack and powder cocaine offenders get equal sentences was rejected by Congress and President Clinton. Tuesday, the commission offered a range of sentencing options that would reduce the disparity to as low as 1.6to1 but no higher than 15to1. Clinton said Tuesday that he supported the commission's move. "The sentencing laws must continue to reflect that crack cocaine is a more harmful form of cocaine," he said. But members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which must approve recommendations, appeared reluctant. Sen. Spencer Abraham (RMich.) said that he was "very skeptical of the approach." But Julie Stewart of Families Against Mandatory Minimums said a study last November in the Journal of the American Medical Association said there was no difference between crack and powder. "Though the argument is that there are greater harms associated with crack, none of the arguments make sense." By Gary Fields, USA TODAY