Pubdate: Wed, 27 Feb 2008
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2008 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Craig Morford
Note: Craig Morford is the acting deputy U.S. attorney general.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Sentencing+Commission
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/crack+cocaine
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion)

KEEP CRACK CRIMINALS IN PRISON

A Move to Revise Offenders' Sentences Should Stop Until Its Effects 
Can Be Weighed.

The U.S. Sentencing Commission recently decided to apply -- 
retroactively -- new, lighter sentences for those convicted of crimes 
related to crack cocaine. As a result, on Monday, courts across the 
country will begin to decide whether 19,500 of them should be 
released early from federal prison.

A disproportionate share of these prisoners came from urban areas 
such as Los Angeles, and those communities will bear the brunt of their return.

It is the residents of those communities who will have to live with 
the Sentencing Commission's decision -- and many of them have asked 
me and others to oppose it. That is why the Department of Justice and 
national law enforcement organizations have asked Congress to 
postpone the decision from going into effect.

When I speak with people who live in these communities, they tell me 
that they struggle with the scourge of crack cocaine every day: 
Children can't play outside, elders can't sit on the front porch, 
families are imprisoned in their homes. And they have asked 
prosecutors like me to do something about it. Simply put, we 
prosecute crack offenders because everyone has the right to be safe 
in their homes.

When I speak with police chiefs across the country, they ask for 
federal assistance in their fight against crack-dealing gangs. U.S. 
attorneys have worked with local law enforcement and used the tools 
that Congress gave us, such as tough sentences for crack dealers, to 
address this gang violence.

As a federal prosecutor in Ohio, I saw what crack does to a 
neighborhood. The 7-All gang turned an entire 10-block neighborhood 
in Cleveland into a crack market. The police chief showed me a crime 
map of the city; the highest volume of the most serious crimes 
blanketed that neighborhood.

In my seven months as acting deputy attorney general, U.S. attorneys 
have told me similar stories.

In Selma, Ala., local law enforcement asked federal prosecutors to 
help clean up an open crack market run by a street gang, and 
residents came out of their homes and lined the streets to applaud 
the law enforcement officers making arrests. In Oklahoma City, crack 
dealers moved into a neighborhood, brought turf wars and shootouts 
and threatened to kill residents who went to the police -- until the 
dealers were put in federal prison.

Under the Sentencing Commission's revisions, about 19,500 inmates -- 
10% of all federal prisoners -- will be eligible for reduced 
sentences. The first 1,600 of these crack offenders will be eligible 
for release in March, and about two-thirds of them will be eligible 
for release within five years.

Reentry programs are not equipped to deal with this number of 
offenders, who, as a result, may not get the help they need to make 
the transition from prison to the streets. That is particularly 
troubling because Sentencing Commission statistics also tell us:

* Nearly 80% of those eligible for retroactive sentencing reduction 
have a prior criminal history.

* About two-thirds of those eligible have a criminal history that 
correlates to a 34% to 55% chance of recidivism within two years.

* About one-third used a gun or other weapon when they committed their offense.

We believe communities are safer when violent, convicted criminals 
are imprisoned for the full duration of their sentences, and so the 
Department of Justice has also asked Congress to consider legislation 
that would limit the effect of the commission's decision. Two 
elements are key to any such legislation. First, only first-time, 
nonviolent offenders should have their sentences reduced. Second, 
judges should not be allowed to reduce sentences beyond what the 
commission specifically provided.

Some believe that Congress need not act because judges can keep the 
violent offenders from being released early. I believe judges will do 
their best. But many of these crimes occurred long ago, and it may be 
difficult for judges to have all the relevant facts before them as 
they reevaluate sentences. The sheer number of cases will overwhelm 
already busy courts, prosecutors and probation officers.

As for the debate about whether there should be much longer sentences 
for crack crimes than for powder cocaine crimes, let's have it. If 
the ratio set by Congress in 1986 is not the right one, let's find 
the right balance -- going forward. But as we have that discussion, 
let's not forget the reasons behind creating any ratio: Crack cocaine 
has a far more devastating effect on communities than does powder 
cocaine. In the meantime, Congress should postpone the implementation 
date beyond Monday to allow time to address these issues.

For residents of neighborhoods afflicted by drug dealing, this debate 
is not about powder versus crack, it's about the violence that crack 
dealing unleashed on their community and about not making it suddenly 
worse. For them, this is not a political topic for debate, it's daily life.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake