Pubdate: Wed, 6 Jan 1999 Source: Village Voice (NY) Contact: http://www.villagevoice.com/ Copyright: 1999 VV Publishing Corporation Author: Cynthia Cotts NOTE: PBS "Frontline" will air "Snitch," the show reviewed below, on Tues., January 12, 1999. 'FRONTLINE' TO COVER 'SNITCHES' JAN 12 Rat Pack In this age of scaredy-cat media, let's hear it for WGBH's Frontline series, which continues to sponsor top-quality investigative reporting. The latest in the long line is "Snitch," a documentary that airs on PBS January 12. In this amazing show, veteran producer Ofra Bikel examines the role of snitches in the drug war and captures the injustice at the heart of the U.S. criminal justice system. Everyone in Congress who swears by their constitutional duties should be forced to watch "Snitch" and then do something about this spectacle of cruel and unusual punishment. The aberration began in the late 1980s, when Congress gave federal prosecutors the power to assign harsh sentences for any drug offense, and to offer cooperation deals as the only way out. Then Congress passed a law allowing prosecutors to hit the lowest person in a drug ring with a sentence fit for a kingpin-with no more evidence required than the word of a single informant. Within a few years, drug defendants were testifying against each other right and left. There's one hitch: with so much incentive, snitches are terribly prone to lie. But drug prosecutors don't have to prove the reliability of their informants, and they don't have to fit the punishment to the crime. If they did, many of the heartbreaking stories Bikel discovered might never have come to be. For example, Clarence Aaron, a college athlete with no prior record, might not have ended up serving three life sentences for his minor role in a single crack deal. Lulu Smith, whose son was a suspected dealer, might not have been convicted by a prosecutor who knew she was innocent. Bikel was new to the subject. "I never used drugs. I don't know anybody who takes drugs," she says. "I assumed that those people are in jail because they got caught with drugs." In fact, under the current laws, people can land in jail who had no drugs on them at all. Along the way, Bikel met prosecutors who told her snitches are indispensable in the drug war and defense attorneys who told her the system invites "unbelievable abuse." "It is really shameful," Bikel says. She has concluded that prosecutors go on sending these minor players to jail because they're too lazy to buck the system. "Informants are easy and making deals is easy," she says. "But it is outrageous." Anyone who watches this show with an open mind will have to agree. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady