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Pubdate: Mon, 11 Feb 2008 Source: Buffalo News (NY) Copyright: 2008 The Buffalo News Contact: http://www.buffalonews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/61 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/crack+cocaine Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Sentencing+Commission Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) BATTLE SHAPES UP OVER CRACK SENTENCES Waivers May Block Bids for Early Release Crack dealers convicted in Western New York may face a legal fight from federal prosecutors if they apply for early releases from prison under new sentencing guidelines approved late last year. Federal court officials took action last year to give a break to people convicted on federal crack cocaine charges. They enacted changes after years of complaints that crack sentences were exceptionally harsh and that African-Americans from poor, inner-city neighborhoods were the ones most likely to be convicted. But U.S. Attorney Terrance P. Flynn may oppose requests to reduce the sentences of previously convicted people, based on a legal waiver that is routinely included in federal plea agreements filed in Buffalo and Rochester. Dating to at least 1997, hundreds of federal drug offenders in the region have agreed to the waiver, promising that they would never ask for reduced sentences -- even if future changes in the law allowed them to do so. "At this point, we haven't decided whether we will try to enforce the waiver," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph M. Guerra III, Flynn's top aide for drug prosecutions. "We've talked about the situation with [Justice Department] officials in Washington, and we're waiting for guidance or directives from them." The waiver could cause major problems for an estimated 200-plus men and women who were convicted of federal crack cocaine crimes in this region and are likely to apply for sentence reductions. Federal judges will begin considering those requests March 3. At least eight men and one woman already have filed court papers in Buffalo or Rochester, asking for their crack sentences to be reduced, according to Guerra. Nationwide, as many as 20,000 people are expected to apply, according to federal court officials. Most of the federal prosecutors throughout the country do not require offenders to sign the kind of waiver that is required locally, court officials said. If Flynn's office decides to fight the requests for reduced sentences, that will upset many defense attorneys and Frank B. Mesiah, president of the Buffalo chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Too Harsh, Says Mesiah By changing the guidelines, Congress and the U.S. Sentencing Commission have already made a clear statement that people convicted of crack cocaine crimes were being sentenced too harshly, Mesiah said. "It would be wrong for [prosecutors] to challenge that," Mesiah said. "If the U.S. attorney follows that policy, he will be adding even more inequities to the system." Similar comments came from Buffalo defense lawyers James P. Harrington, Mark J. Mahoney and Herbert L. Greenman, all of whom represent many local drug defendants. "It would be unfair and unfortunate," Harrington said. "It would go against the spirit of what Congress and the sentencing commission were trying to do when they decided that these sentences should be reduced." Harrington is the Buffalo representative on a national panel of attorneys who represent federal defendants who can't afford lawyers. Ultimately, federal judges will decide on a case-by-case basis if defendants qualify for early release from prison. "This issue [on the waivers] has not come before us yet. If it does come before us, we'll decide on it," said Richard J. Arcara, chief U.S. district judge for Western New York. "There are a lot of complicated issues surrounding the changes in the crack sentences. We're already looking at these issues, and we'll be deciding these cases as expeditiously and fairly as we can. It will be a high priority." Judges will be looking at each individual's criminal history -- including the amount of drugs involved and whether any violent crimes were also involved -- before deciding whether to reduce sentences, Arcara said. One man who already has applied for a reduced sentence is Edward "Blue" Burton, who was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison for crack cocaine trafficking in December 1994. On the same day that his federal drug sentence was issued, Burton received a much shorter state court sentence -- 5 to 15 years -- for killing a man during a fight over a card game. He was convicted of second-degree manslaughter in the state case. Crack Versus Powder Burton said he never intended to kill the man, and he denied police allegations that he was associated with one of the city's most notorious gangsters ever, former LA Boys leader Donald "Sly" Green. Since the 1980s, federal penalties for crack cocaine crimes have been much more severe than those prescribed for traffickers of powdered cocaine. In one often-cited example, a person caught with 5 grams of crack would receive a mandatory five-year prison term. The same person would have to be caught with 500 grams of powdered cocaine to trigger the same sentence. Congress said it enhanced the penalties for crack offenders in the 1980s because of the powerfully addictive nature of crack and because many crack gangs throughout the country were extremely violent. But civil rights groups have always maintained that the enhanced penalties had an unfair impact on people from impoverished minority neighborhoods where crack is usually sold and used. "This is long overdue," Mesiah said. "You have poor people serving much longer sentences because they were caught with crack cocaine, instead of powder . . . That isn't fair." Court officials said most of the convicts who will receive the reductions are likely to see their sentences cut by two years or less. The changes affect federal prisoners only. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake