Source: The Washington Post Copyright: 1998 The Washington Post Company Pubdate: Tue, 22 Dec 1998 Page: A23 Contact: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: William Raspberry THE MANDATORY-SENTENCING MISTAKE Vincent Schiraldi's call sounded for all the world like another of those false syllogisms that make me crazy. You know: For the money it costs to keep a young man in prison, we could send him to Harvard. Or, if we took the money we're spending on the drug "wars" and spent it on the public schools, every kid in America would have a shot at a first-rate education. Such non sequiturs, I told him, fail to convince anyone not already on your side of the argument. Worse, by giving your opponents such a vulnerable target, you encourage the impression that your argument -- not just your jerry-built straw man -- has been demolished. What Schiraldi, director of the Washington-based Justice Policy Institute, had discovered is that over the past 10 years, New York State has increased spending on prisons by very close to the amount by which it has decreased spending on higher education. So is he saying that if the state spent less on prisons, it would spend more on colleges -- and vice versa? And if he's not saying that, what is he saying? "Look," he told me, "I'm the last person who wants to set up 'straw men' in advocating criminal justice reform. The other side has an easy enough time knocking us down as it is. But I think this higher-ed vs. prisons analysis does provide the needed scale by which to illustrate the growth of the prison system and how prisons have come to dominate our political and social landscape. "New York State is spending nearly twice as much on prisons as it did a decade ago -- a $761 million increase -- while spending on the city and state university systems has declined by $615 million during the same period." Then Schiraldi -- perhaps sensing that my eyes were starting to glaze over - -- interrupted his account to tell me about Tom Eddy. "Tom and I were both at SUNY [State University of New York] Binghamton when, in 1979, he was arrested under the Rockefeller drug laws. He wound up serving 13 years of a 15-to-life sentence for selling two ounces of cocaine. "Though Tom and I began in the same place, I started a nonprofit, started a family and launched a life while he wasted over a decade in prison. His story, to me, embodies the wastefulness of these laws, and how our prisons are warehousing people who don't need to be there." And suddenly Schiraldi was making sense to me in a way the mirror-image symmetry of his prison/college dichotomy did not. The spending patterns are not the problem; the problem is poorly thought-out policy, misguided toughness and bad law. The Rockefeller laws -- touted as a no-nonsense approach to ridding New York of the scourge of drugs -- provided mandatory jail times for drug offenses that were often in excess of sentences for violent crimes. Once people understood that not even judges could soften their sentences, people would think twice about dealing drugs. The target, of course, was big-time drug racketeers. One of the first to be snared was Eddy, a national merit scholar in his sophomore year. It's fair to say that Eddy, whose sentence was commuted by then-Gov. Mario Cuomo four years ago this month, caused his own problems. But it is also fair to wonder if the state got good value for the money it spent keeping him locked up for more than 13 years. And it is crucial to ask whether it isn't time to end this mistaken policy - -- and not just in New York. Much of the prison overcrowding (and the consequent need for huge new outlays for new and expanded prison facilities) is the result of mandatory sentencing for drug offenders, including -- perhaps even mainly -- low-level dealers. When Eddy first ran afoul of the draconian Rockefeller laws, 11 percent of the inmates of New York prisons were there for drug offenses. By last year, 47 percent were in prison for drug offenses. The trend is national and -- Schiraldi's point -- it is the source of our prison-building boom that is distorting state budgets across America. He's right, of course -- right also when he notes that Florida and California now have bigger budgets for prisons than for higher education. But you don't need any false syllogisms to make that point -- no nonsense about how New York could have sent several men like Eddy through college for what it cost to keep him in the slammer. I'm content to let Eddy send himself to college (he's about to get his law degree). I just wish we could admit our mandatory-sentencing mistake and stop throwing good money after bad. - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake