Pubdate: Sun, 21 Sep 2008
Source: Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL)
Copyright: 2008 Sun-Sentinel Company
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/mVLAxQfA
Website: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/159
Author: Vanessa Blum, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing)

PRISON TERMS IN COCAINE CASES REDUCED FOR SOME BECAUSE OF DISPARITIES

U.S. Commission Of Judges Found Crack Penalties Were Too Harsh And Affected
Minorities More Than Whites

Ordinarily, Anthea Harris would have waited in the
car.

But on that day in October 1993, Harris didn't feel safe in the Fort
Lauderdale neighborhood where her husband pulled over near dusk to
conduct a drug deal. So she went with him into the apartment and
watched as he exchanged 550 rocks of crack cocaine for $5,500 in cash.

The transaction, made to undercover informants, was recorded on
videotape. Four years later, on Aug. 20, 1997, a federal judge
sentenced Harris to 15 years and eight months for conspiring to
distribute crack cocaine.

In prison, as Harris met women serving far less time for importing
larger amounts of powder cocaine, the mother of two learned a painful
lesson.

"I'd have been better off if I would have went and strapped the drugs
to my body and came through the airport," she said. "There's no one on
earth who can explain that to me."

To civil rights activists, defense lawyers and many judges, cases like
Harris' show the double standard in federal sentencing laws that treat
crack 100 times more harshly than powder cocaine.

Critics say the system leads to excessive prison terms for many
nonviolent, first-time criminals and results in longer sentences for
blacks a?" the majority of crack cocaine defendants. Now, for the
first time, 19,500 prisoners nationwide have a chance to reduce their
sentences under a new rule lowering tough penalties for crimes
involving crack by an average of 23 months. South Florida judges have
already trimmed the prison terms of more than 100 drug offenders,
including Harris, released after almost 11 years.

She left the Coleman Federal Correctional Complex near Orlando on June
2, reuniting with her two daughters, now 12 and 18.

But not everyone is benefiting. What's more, critics say, the fix
doesn't go far enough to correct the sentencing disparity, which dates
to the federal Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986.

That law imposed a five-year mandatory minimum sentence for crimes
involving five grams of crack and a 10-year mandatory minimum sentence
for crimes involving 50 grams of the drug a?" the approximate weight
of a Snickers bar.

"In many states, we don't sentence child abuse that harshly or even
murder," said Carmen Hernandez, president of the National Association
of Criminal Defense Lawyers.

Law enforcement officials fear the rule change could put violent
criminals back on the streets. In August, five months after a man won
such an early release, authorities in St. Johns County arrested him on
charges of raping a 13-year-old girl.

Panel's Reports

The new sentencing guidelines came after the U.S. Sentencing
Commission, made up of judges and criminal justice analysts from both
of the main political parties, issued reports concluding penalties for
crack cocaine were too harsh. It said the tough guidelines often
applied to low-level offenders and mostly affected minorities.

South Florida's chief federal prosecutor testified in 2006 against the
changes, contending tough penalties for crack cocaine help law
enforcement fight drug- and gang-related crime. U.S. Attorney Alex
Acosta said strong sentencing guidelines were useful for combating
gang activity and violent crime.

The new rule does not guarantee an inmate's early release and it does
not amend the strict mandatory minimums set by Congress. Career felons
generally are not eligible for sentence reductions. For others, it
comes down to a judge's discretion.

South Florida federal judges have denied sentence reductions at a rate
greater than the national average, turning away almost half the
prisoners asking for early release since the change took effect in
March.

Inmates may have better odds in other parts of the country.
Nationwide, judges approved 76 percent of requests from crack
offenders, compared with South Florida's approval rate of 54 percent.

One local inmate to meet disappointment was Sean Johnson a?" a
first-time offender serving a 19-year sentence. Broward sheriff's
deputies arrested Johnson on his 18th birthday after finding a crack
lab in a Miramar apartment where he lived with his 17-year-old
girlfriend and her child.

A jury convicted Johnson of drug trafficking and U.S. District Judge
William Zloch sentenced him March 6, 1993, to 19 years and seven months.

Johnson, now 34, has lived his entire adult life in federal prison. He
has a son, born months after his arrest.

With the rule change, Johnson became eligible for immediate release,
and prosecutors raised no objections.

However, Zloch rejected Johnson's request without explanation in
March, leaving supporters baffled. On Sept. 12, the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the 11th Circuit returned the case to Zloch for "further
consideration and explanation."

"From our perspective, he would be an ideal candidate," said Kathleen
Williams, chief federal public defender for South Florida. "He's a man
who took a horrendous turn in his life and made it positive beyond
anyone's expectations."

Johnson's aunt, Vivian Wright, of Pompano Beach, agreed. "He's done
enough time for what he did."

Looking Tough

When Congress set the tough sentences for crimes involving crack
cocaine, federal lawmakers considered it more addictive and more
dangerous than powder. Critics insist scientific research has since
discredited those theories. They contend tougher sentences for crack
are discriminatory, because more than 80 percent of defendants
incarcerated for selling crack are black.

The new guidelines don't eliminate the sentencing disparity because
federal mandatory minimum sentences remain in place. For example,
possession of 50 grams of crack still carries the same 10-year prison
sentence as five kilograms of cocaine powder.

Proposals to ease penalties have stalled because lawmakers want to
look tough on crime, Hernandez said. "Many politicians fear that if
they reduce sentences, someday it can be use against them
politically."

Harris has no time to be bitter over the 10 years and nine months she
spent behind bars.

"You have to let it go," said Harris, who now lives with relatives
outside Orlando. "Sitting around and being angry about what happened
to me is not going to get me anywhere."
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MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin