Pubdate: Thu, 17 Dec 1998 Source: Fairfield County Weekly (CT) Copyright: 1998 New Mass. Media, Inc. Contact: One Dock Street, 5th Floor, Stamford, CT 06902 Fax: (203) 406-1099 Website: http://www.fairfieldweekly.com/ Author: Ken Krayeske FIVE YEARS FOR FIVE GRAMS What should Connecticut lawmakers do about unjust, racially biased and overly expensive mandatory minimum statutes? Should a convicted murderer expect to spend more time in jail than someone caught with two ounces of crack cocaine? Common sense may dictate yes, but the reality of mandatory sentencing would prove you wrong. Faced with this absurdity, Connecticut legislators listening to Jonathan Caulkins, Ph.D., expound on the costliness of mandatory minimum sentences for cocaine offenses waited all night recently for the answerthat never came: What should Connecticut lawmakers do about unjust racially biased and overly expensive mandatory minimum statutes? "I don't know," Caulkins said Dec. 8 during the Q&A period following his presentation, part of a Yale University seminar series on policies on illicit drugs. Caulkins, in a study in conjunction with the Rand Corporation and the University of Pittsburgh, determined that mandatory minimum sentencing is not only ineffective in curbing the flow of drugs but more costly to taxpayers than alternative methods of sentencing. Federal mandatory minimums target possession. Sentencing guidelines for crack cocaine dictate that five grams earns five years in jail, 50 grams gets 10 years, and anywhere from 500 to 5,000 grams merits 20 years. Powdered cocaine reaps a mandatory sentence of five years for 500 grams, and 10 years for 5,000 grams. The average minimum homicide sentence is 64 months, slightly longer than the base punishment for five grams of crack. In Connecticut, mandatory minimums kick in when drug offenses occur within certain geographical areas, such as school and hospital zones. "Do I want them repealed? Yes," Caulkins said. "I think sentences should be shorter. Legalization is a stupid idea for cocaine and heroin. But so are 10-year sentences for possession. I think the answer is somewhere in between." Caulkins' study, based on data collected over a 15-year period, compares the effectiveness of normal law enforcement action, mandatory minimums and drug treatment in reducing the use in kilos of cocaine per million dollars expended. The results showed drug treatment is eight times more effective than mandatory minimums at stopping usage and six times more effective than normal law enforcement in stopping usage. What kinds of treatment worked and what types of law enforcement activities were considered "normal," he didn't say. While the analysis focused on the cost-effectiveness of mandatory minimums rather than the inherent racial biases and injustices in the laws, Caulkins detailed how crack-- sold and used predominantly by minorities in cities--warrants longer incarcerations than powder, which is pushed by higher-tier wholesalers more likely to be non-minority. And, by removing sentencing discretion from judges, mandatory minimums result in first-time, non-violent offenders getting exceedingly harsh sentences. Caulkins noted that while mandatory minimums seem to stop cocaine usage for the first two years, the overall cost increases as taxpayers have to pay for more and more prison space. Meanwhile, rather than curb the market for drugs, new dealers simply step in to fill the demand as others are arrested. Caulkins said mandatory minimums only work when the federal government targets high-level dealers and spends more than $20,000 on the investigations. Federal Drug Czar Gen. Barry McCaffrey has seen an abstract of the study and agrees with its conclusions, according to Caulkins, and the Clinton administration has tried to reduce the disparity between sentences for powdered cocaine versus those for crack cocaine. But federal change is unlikely, which is why Caulkins was in New Haven last week. "Still the fundamental problem is that the vast majority of people in treatment relapse," Caulkins said. "We should use enforcement to reduce violence and disorder associated with drug use while treatment chips away at the problem over time." At the same time, talks on policy must eliminate morality and extremism by both prohibitionists and legalization proponents. "Polarizing debate is unconstructive if the idea is pragmatic reform," Caulkins said. But if the 40 or so participants, including state representatives and senators who have taken active roles in changing Connecticut's drug policy from a criminal justice stance to a public health issue, were looking for something more concrete to take into the next legislative session, they didn't find it here. Frustrated by the theoretical nature of the presentation, State Rep. Peter Metz (D-Branford) left saying, "If I can't measure on quantity, give me something I can measure on. There were so many assumptions without considering the practical effects. There's a mixture of techniques applied in the proper way that we're still looking for." - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake