Pubdate: Tue, 28 Sep, 1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: Kathy Walt, Houston Chronicle Austin Bureau Related:the DPF Texas website is at http://www.mapinc.org/dpft/ and Common Sense For Drug Policy's website is at http://www.csdp.org/ BUSH ASKED TO EXAMINE DRUG CASES Groups Seek Pardons For Nonviolent Crimes AUSTIN -- A handful of groups hoping to decriminalize some drug offenses asked Gov. George W. Bush on Monday to examine the cases of an estimated 28,000 people imprisoned in Texas for nonviolent drug offenses with an eye toward commuting some sentences or granting pardons. "Warehousing the nonviolent (inmates) in Texas prisons does not increase the safety or security of Texans, nor does it do anything to help the inmate," said Alan Robison, executive director of the Drug Policy Forum of Texas. In a prepared statement, Bush spokeswoman Linda Edwards noted that under Texas law a governor can commute a sentence or pardon an individual only at the recommendation of the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles. "Governor Bush is reluctant to grant pardons because of his basic belief that those who commit crimes should suffer the consequences of those crimes." Citing Bush's references to unspecified "mistakes" in refusing to answer questions about whether he used illegal drugs more than 25 years ago, the groups said Bush is proof that young people can overcome poor choices to experiment with illicit substances and become productive citizens. If unsubstantiated allegations that Bush used drugs are true, then a "terrible double standard" exists, Robison added. "Governor Bush thinks that if he did it, it should be regarded as a youthful indiscretion," Robison said. "Whereas if we do it, or at least if we get caught doing it, we should be punished for it by being sent to prison." Robison's group and several others, including Families Against Mandatory Minimums and the Texas Hemp Society, said the nation's War on Drugs and harsh prison sentences have failed to end drug abuse. "A criminal record for what is often a youthful indiscretion makes it very difficult for an individual to be fully productive, tax-paying citizen," Robison said. "It also prevents people from participating in electoral politics as voters or candidates for office." Kevin Zeese of the group Common Sense for Drug Policy said Texas ranks second in the number of disenfranchised voters as a result of criminal convictions, a situation that has the greatest impact on minorities. In a letter to former first lady Barbara Bush, a Dallas woman who has three sons in prisons on drug conspiracy charges, asked for her help in convincing the governor that drug policies should be changed. "Youthful drug use, an issue that you and your son both claim is `irrelevant' to the governor's personal history, has been made permanently relevant to us by drug policies of the federal government and the 50 states, including Texas," wrote Virginia Traylor. "Our sons will have no second chances." - --- MAP posted-by: Thunder