Source: Washington Post Author: Colbert I. King Contact: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Pubdate: Saturday, January 31, 1998 WHEN JUSTICE IS TO BLIND I wouldn't blame Karen Blakney of Southeast Washington if she's been following with a bit of cynicism the Monica Lewinsky-Bill Clinton show downtown. Blakney shouldn't even be blamed if she's feeling pangs of jealousy as she watches Linda Tripp and Lucianne Goldberg do their thing. Because there is one absolute certainty about the ultimate outcome of this latest White House scandal. Whether the coming months produce impeachment, moral condemnation, exoneration or veneration, everybody who's anybody in this sex, lies and audiotape saga will end up at some point down the road free as birds and financially better off than ever before. America's social and moral codes of the '90s were made for these folks. And perhaps that's the part that makes Karen Blakney most heartsick of all. Because Blakney, a mother of nine children, has been having her own go-round with the American system of justice. And it sure ain't like what's being served up in the headlines these days. Though both Blakney and Monica Lewinsky are women of Washington, their lives couldn't be farther apart. Blakney's getting by on welfare and food stamps with a little extra help from her youngest child's father and from her oldest daughter, who's working while going to school. Lewinsky, of Watergate and product of an affluent Beverly Hills lifestyle, has probably never had a serious hunger pang in her life. The only thing they may have in common, besides gender, is one experience with law enforcement. Lewinsky's came as she sat for lunch in an upscale Virginia hotel with friend-turned-traitor Linda Tripp. As you know, dear reader, unbeknownst to Lewinsky, the FBI also had joined them at the table in the form of a body wire worn by Tripp that recorded every word being said about Lewinsky's alleged sexual affair and coverup plot involving the president of the United States. Blakney experienced a government "gotcha" of her own. It came courtesy of two undercover federal agents posing as drug buyers. Not that Blakney, also known as "Cookie," was doing any of the selling when the agents revealed their identities. The drugs were being peddled by two traffickers. A drug-addicted bit player, Blakney was hired (in keeping with her nickname) to cook powder cocaine into crack, for which she received the whopping sum of $100. Nonetheless, it was enough to get her busted -- a then 29-year-old junkie in handcuffs for trying to feed a bad habit. Today, eight years later and following three years behind bars, Blakney is still fighting the nightmare of that arrest. Blakney's criminal justice experience makes Bill Clinton's crisis look like high tea in the White House Rose Garden. She was caught cooking powder cocaine into crack. Because there's a 100-to-1 disparity between sentences for crack and powder cocaine offenses, Blakney faced a mandatory sentence several times worse than if she had been found packaging the powder. It's a difference enshrined in law -- a law that is sending a generation of young black men and women like Blakney to jail for long stretches. Why? Most powder cocaine users are white. And the 90 percent of defendants in crack prosecutions? You got it -- they're black. This could have changed in 1995, when Congress and Clinton took a look at the sentencing disparities. But it was before an election year, and the Republicans -- not needing us -- and Clinton -- owning us -- agreed that the law could stay the way it is. After all, why should they care? So at the time of her sentencing in federal court, Blakney faced a mandatory minimum of 10 years in jail. However, Senior U.S. Judge Louis Oberdorfer, a brilliant and compassionate jurist and a conscientious foe of arbitrary mandatory minimum sentences, ruled that a compulsory sentence of 10 years for a minor player like Blakney would be a "cruel and unusual" application of the law in violation of the Eighth Amendment. Now, Oberdorfer's no softie. He sentenced the drug traffickers in the same case to life in prison without parole. When it came to Blakney, however, Oberdorfer imposed 33 months, the sentence she would have faced in a powder cocaine case. You think independent counsel Ken Starr's a junkyard dog? Check out our own U.S. attorney's office in the District. Prosecutors there became apoplectic at the thought of a pipehead not spending a decade behind bars as prescribed by law. So with dozens of unprosecuted D.C. government corruption cases collecting dust in their office, federal lawyers rushed off to challenge Judge Oberdorfer's ruling. They struck pay dirt when a three-judge panel at the U.S. Court of Appeals here reversed the ruling and kicked it back to Judge Oberdorfer for resentencing. To his everlasting credit, Judge Oberdorfer tried to hang tough, sentencing Blakney to the 33 months she had already served by the time he took up her case for resentencing. He had good reasons for not sending her back to jail. Since her release, Blakney had turned her life around. She didn't have someone from the social A list like Clinton's sidekick, Vernon Jordan, looking out for her -- you see, she's a "nobody" from east of the river. Nor does Blakney have the benefit of a rich father or a fashionable mom who can fix her up with a place in the Watergate or a New York apartment. But she does have grit -- and since that incarceration, she does have God. After jail, Blakney successfully completed a drug-treatment program and knocked off the illicit drugs -- as random drug testing continues to show. She's involved in her church's Outreach Ministry Program and has become a leader in turning youth and others in the community away from drug addiction. "Exemplary" is the way Senior U.S. Probation Officer Verdale Freeman described Blakney's post-jail adjustment. And best of all, according to court papers, Blakney is on good terms with her young family and keeping it on the straight and narrow. But guess what? Prosecutors said to hell with Blakney's reforming herself. The law says we've got to take her from her family and lock her up for seven more years. So what if her kids become public charges of the city's much-maligned foster-care system? The appeals panel, agreeing that Blakney's successful rehabilitation and community service are irrelevant, threw in with the prosecutors and vacated Judge Oberdorfer's resentencing decision. It's all too much for Judge Oberdorfer, who has recused himself from the case. Blakney's fate is now in the hands of U.S. District Court Judge Gladys Kessler, who has set a status hearing for Feb. 10. That's when Blakney may find out when she has to kiss her kids goodbye. And that, my friends, is a glimpse of American justice as administered away from the front pages and evening news. Blakney's among the thousands of faceless Americans who -- unlike Lewinsky, the Clintons and the rest of that ilk -- pay a steep price for being poor. Go ahead, get worked up and choose sides in the Clinton-Lewinsky controversy if you must. But remember people like Blakney who go through this life without a margin of safety. That is the face of justice nobody sees. © Copyright 1998 The Washington Post Company