Pubdate: Mon, 9 Dec 2002 Source: Detroit Free Press (MI) Contact: 2002 Detroit Free Press Website: http://www.freep.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/125 Author: Brian Dickerson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) BILLS ADMIT DRUG STANCE WENT TOO FAR More than two decades after enacting some of the nation's harshest penalties for the possession and sale of illegal drugs, Michigan lawmakers are poised to acknowledge that the state's approach to narcotics crime has been a costly failure. Legislation adopted by the state House of Representatives last week would abolish mandatory prison sentences based solely on the amount of the drugs seized in an arrest and give judges in drug cases the same discretion they now enjoy in sentencing violent offenders. Instead of being dispatched to prison for minimum terms of 10 and 20 years, newly convicted drug offenders would be sentenced under guidelines that take into account an offender's criminal history, the use or absence of deadly weapons, and the likelihood that the offender would benefit from substance abuse treatment. Mandatory lifetime probation for drug offenders would be eliminated, and more than 4,000 ex-cons now required to report to state probation officers for the rest of their lives would be eligible for discharge after five years of supervision. Steady Campaign The long-overdue overhaul of Michigan's drug sentencing laws was spearheaded by state Rep. Bill McConico, D-Detroit, who labored patiently to win the support of prosecutors, judges and substance abuse treatment professionals. Approved last Wednesday by the Senate Judiciary Committee, the package is expected to win the approval of the full Senate before this year's lame duck-session ends. Maybe it's a coincidence that McConico's bills moved the same week lawmakers began cutting expenditures to make up for a half-billion-dollar shortfall in state revenues, but I doubt it. Hard times make for hard choices, but they also have a way of illuminating the difference between crime-fighting measures that sound good and those that actually deliver value to taxpayers. Draconian mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenders have never been in the second category. Intended to take major traffickers off the street, they've succeeded mostly in filling Michigan's prisons with addicts and mules too low in the food chain to trade what they know for reduced charges. Incarceration Soars In the two decades following the adoption of mandatory minimum sentences, the rate of incarceration for drug offenses jumped 23 percent for whites and more than 300 percent for black people. By 1998, one of every five persons dispatched to Michigan prisons was committed for a drug offense. Last week, when Gov. John Engler and state lawmakers went hunting for places to cut the state's budget, they agreed to slash spending in most departments by 2.5 percent. But in the Department of Corrections, where annual spending has ballooned from $732 million to $1.7 billion during Engler's 12 years in office, they were able to pare only 1 percent. It will be awhile before the new drug sentencing guidelines free up much bed space in Michigan's prisons. But McConico's legislation should gradually enable the state to concentrate more of its prison resources on the most dangerous criminals, while diverting more nonviolent drug offenders to treatment programs. And it's important to remember that addicts who beat their habits won't just relieve taxpayers of the burden of housing and feeding them. If we're lucky, they'll become taxpayers themselves. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk