Pubdate: Mon, 16 Aug 2010
Source: Providence Journal, The (RI)
Copyright: 2010 The Providence Journal Company
Contact:  http://www.projo.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/352

CLOSING THE COCAINE GAP

It took time, but Congress has finally tightened the egregious
sentencing gap between crimes involving crack cocaine and those linked
to the powder form. In legislation signed by President Obama Aug. 3 -
a disparity that had been 100 to 1 was trimmed to 18 to 1. Under
previous law, a person charged in federal court with possessing 5
grams of crack faced a mandatory minimum of five years in jail. But
someone with the powder form had to possess 500 grams to incur the
same penalty.

Along with narrowing this gap, the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 makes
several improvements. The mandatory minimum sentence for first-time
simple possession is gone. This should help bolster an important
distinction between users (especially casual or first-time offenders)
and dealers. The strongest punishment should be focused on the latter.
Now, it will take 28 grams of crack cocaine, an amount a dealer might
carry, to trigger a five-year sentence.

Severe penalties for crack were born in the 1980s, when use of the
drug surged in many cities, especially among the poor. Violence was
seen as a frequent byproduct. But overwhelmingly, those jailed were
black. Typically, the proportion is around 80 percent. In contrast,
users of powder cocaine (far more leniently treated) tend to be white.
Yet recent data show that even most crack users are either white or
Hispanic, indicating an intolerable racial disparity in the handling
of drug offenses.

Though crack produces a more immediate high, research has found little
difference between the two forms' addictive properties. The data
connecting crack to violence has also weakened in recent years. Still,
the new law wisely provides stiffer penalties for crack-related
offenses involving violence.

In 1986, when the previous law was passed, legislators were rightly
concerned about the drug abuse and lawlessness afflicting too many
urban neighborhoods. But the years since have shown that incarcerating
tens of thousands of chiefly black American males does little to help
these communities thrive. The pool of marriage partners for women
shrinks; too many children grown up without a father's
involvement.

The Congressional Budget Office estimates that, with shorter sentences
under the new law, the federal prison system could save about $42
million over five years. That money would be much better spent on
education and jobs. Further, like most crimes, drug offenses should
primarily be dealt with by the states. For all these reasons, the new
sentencing law is a move in the right direction. 
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