Pubdate: TUES, 23 Mar 1999 Source: San Mateo County Times (CA) Copyright: 1999 by MediaNews Group, Inc. and ANG Newspapers Contact: http://www.newschoice.com/newspapers/alameda/smct/ TIME TO MODIFY WAR ON DRUGS AT the rate we're going, we'll have 2 million people behind bars next year, half of them African Americans. While the prison bulge is credited as the biggest factor in reducing crime by, thankfully, taking the worst criminals out of circulation, calls are being made to refocus the war against drugs on treatment and prevention, not just incarceration. Drug offenses are the largest single category of crimes for which federal prison inmates are serving, and about one-quarter of state prison inmates are drug offenders, according to the Sentencing Project, a Washington, D.C., group critical of the end toward harsher sentencing of criminals. With African Americans making up more than half of state and federal prisoners, the question also is being reasonably asked whether they're disproportionately prosecuted. While it's true that many prisoners are violent and vicious, there are also many hundreds of thousands of low-level, nonviolent offenders who may benefit from treatment for drug abuse, or from learning to read, who may yet be persuaded to straighten out their lives. Critics who argue that wholesale incarceration does nothing but raise the cost of the drug war worry that unless we re-examine the situation we'll be locked into what they call the prison industrial complex, which costs about $25 billion a year, or $250 for every household in the country. As it is, California has almost 160,000 prisoners - about twice the population of Alameda - more than any other state. One big reason for that, besides California's huge population, is the length of sentences, some experts say. The "Three Strikes, You're Out" law is having its effect, and there isn't much support for reducing sentences. A proposal to modify the law by requiring a third strike to be a felony is under consideration in the state Senate. In the meantime, efforts are being made to gauge the will for reviewing mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenders, to reduce the prison bulge. To this end, Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass last week introduced a bill in the House of Representatives to restore discretion to judges to set aside mandatory minimum sentences in low-level, nonviolent drug offnses, and re-sentence offenders under the fairer national sentencing guidelines. Introducing the bill, Frank said, "I have spent a lot of time trying to convince people at our drug policies are misguided, with much emphasis on punitive measures, not enough on demand reduction efforts." Frank has a point, and this might be a time to replace the war on drugs with a poliicy allowing state and local governents to design their own treatment programs. Frank's bill amends the 1994 Omnibus Control Bill. That legislation included a safety valve from minimum mandatory penties for certain first-time, nonviolent, cooperative drug offenders. A safety valve means that in the discretion of a federal district court judge, a defendant could be sentenced under the federal sentencing guidelines, as opposed to the fixed minimum mandatory sentences in the law. Frank's proposal is worth supporting if it would free up some of the bunk space occupied by drug offenders to be used by predatory crime perpetrators. We don't think that mandatory sentencing of drug dealers is negotiable, however. Dealers don't merit the same compassion as users, especially the typically young, poor, uneducated, nonsocial prisoners. But let's remember why this whole mandatory business began. It was to correct an imbalance among judges, some of whom believed that drug use and drug selling was not a crime but more of a social ill. Even if we've gone as far as we can with drug users, we think locking dealers up is still the thing to do. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck