Pubdate: Wed, 10 Nov 1999 Source: San Francisco Examiner (CA) Copyright: 1999 San Francisco Examiner Page: A 18 - Editorial Contact: http://www.examiner.com/ Forum: http://examiner.com/cgi-bin/WebX CONGRESSIONAL CRACKS Far From Reforming Matters, A Move To Revise Drug Sentences Would Actually Make A Bad System Worse - And More Costly THE ROAD to hell is surely paved with legislators' good intentions. Instead, maybe it should just be paved with legislators. Congress is considering a proposal that must have been written by someone on a drug-induced hallucination. In the interest of "reforming" federal drug laws, Congress would reduce the threshold of possessing powdered cocaine for a mandatory five-year sentence from 500 grams to 50. (Fifty grams is less than two ounces.) This maneuver is supposed to reduce racial disparity in sentencing. Not only does it fail to do that, it would increase the number of federal inmates by thousands and it would send to prison many more African Americans, precisely the racial group the bill is intended to aid. And, despite the boasts of its backers, the legislation doesn't lay a finger on drug kingpins. Possessing 100 times more powdered cocaine than crack cocaine is required for a five-year federal sentence, even though the two forms of the drug are pharmacologically the same. That's a sore point because blacks account for 84 percent of convictions for crack. A group of federal judges, the U.S. Sentencing Commission and the White House oppose reducing the powdered cocaine minimum. Instead, they all prefer the idea of increasing the amount of crack cocaine needed to trigger a five-year sentence. Seems like a bit of sanity. Our courts are jammed with drug defendants. Our prisons are overflowing with inmates convicted of simple drug possession. And our streets are increasingly filled with ex-cons whose lives have been torn up because of over-zealous drug laws. Politics makes people crazy, apparently. No tough-on-crime politician wants to reduce punishments. Elections loom. How much more popular to increase penalties for drug crimes while pretending to battle the racially skewed results produced by present-day drug statutes. The Republican proposal sponsored by Sen. Spencer Abraham of Michigan aims, in his words, "to send the message loud and clear to drug kingpins and crack peddlers that the price of business is going up, not down." Abraham should also point out that his bill would send costs of incarceration up, not down. Plus, almost a third of the new convicts would be black, according to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons, while 48 percent would be Hispanic. If Abraham and his GOP colleagues really want to send a message, they should start a thorough re-examination and restructuring of federal drug laws. Listen to the judges who hear these cases daily. And while we're at it, let's throw out mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenders. That straitjacket clogs the courts and jails, too. The present system is insane. And locking up more people in pursuit of racial "justice" would just make it nuttier. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake