Pubdate: Thu, 15 Aug 2013
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2013 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Douglas A. Berman
Note: Douglas A. Berman is a professor of law at the Ohio State 
University Moritz College of Law and creator of the blog Sentencing 
Law and Policy.

HOLDER PLAYS CATCH-UP

He Should Do More to Seize the Sentencing Reform Moment.

In his speech to the American Bar Assn. on Monday, Atty. Gen. Eric H. 
Holder Jr. sounded more like a fierce critic of the federal criminal 
justice system than its formal leader. He described some federal 
mandatory minimum prison terms as "excessive" and "draconian" and 
said "they oftentimes generate unfairly long sentences." He asserted 
that "people of color often face harsher punishments than their 
peers," and he more broadly lamented that "too many Americans go to 
too many prisons for far too long, and for no truly good law 
enforcement reason."

But as startling, and welcome, as his statements were, the issues he 
raised weren't new. Holder's themes, and even his rhetoric, echo what 
many criminal justice advocates have been saying for years. Indeed, 
in a major policy speech in 2007, then presidential candidate Barack 
Obama talked passionately about the need for federal sentencing 
reform to help usher in "a new dawn of justice."

Yet, until now, aside from relatively tepid prodding of Congress to 
address extreme and disparate federal sentences on crack cocaine, the 
Obama administration's criminal justice policies have largely 
followed the "get-tough" script that a generation of Democrats 
embraced hoping to thwart political attacks that they are "soft on 
crime." On nearly every major criminal justice issue, including 
marijuana policy, federal prosecutorial powers, the war on drugs and 
the clemency process, the administration has shown little interest in 
seizing opportunities to pioneer long-needed reforms.

So why the apparent change in course now? In a way, the Obama 
administration is coming late to the party. President Obama's 
traditional adversaries had already begun talking about the need for reform.

In recent years, with criminal justice expenditures accounting for an 
ever-larger portion of shrinking government budgets, Republican 
leaders at both the state and federal levels had begun championing 
reforms designed to reduce prison populations and their associated 
costs. A prominent new group, Right on Crime - which includes such 
GOP stalwarts as Jeb Bush, Newt Gingrich, Grover Norquist and Edwin 
Meese III - says in its statement of principles that a true 
conservative needs to be tough not only on crime but also on criminal 
justice spending. And the group stresses that over-reliance on 
incarceration is not a cost-effective approach to public safety.

Another prominent conservative, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), emerged this 
year as a prominent advocate for federal sentencing reform. Paul has 
sponsored legislation that would soften federal mandatory sentencing 
statutes, publicly complaining that "one size-fits-all federal 
mandatory sentences ... are heavy-handed and arbitrary" and 
"disproportionately affect those without the means to fight them."

Holder's bar association speech suggests the Obama administration 
senses that the time could be right for a bipartisan consensus in 
support of major federal sentencing reform. But his speech also 
hinted that the administration might be content with a gradual 
approach to achieving needed reforms.

The new charging policy that Holder unveiled - in which federal 
prosecutors won't routinely include in indictments the amount of 
drugs seized, so as not to trigger mandatory minimum sentences in 
some cases - is not especially bold or sweeping. And other important 
reforms haven't even been discussed.

If the administration is serious about reforming the system, it 
should immediately stop aggressively prosecuting medical marijuana 
providers that are in compliance with local laws. It should be 
proactively identifying and supporting clemency requests from federal 
inmates who received inappropriately lengthy sentences under 
mandatory guidelines.

Though Holder should be credited for giving attention to these issues 
in a forceful speech, he and the president need to recognize that a 
remarkable alignment of public policy concerns and broader political 
realities make the next few months a critical period for achieving 
the "sweeping, systematic changes" that Holder correctly said are 
needed. The combination of relatively low crime rates, lean budgets, 
sequester cuts and overcrowded federal prisons presents a unique 
moment for the enactment of landmark criminal justice legislation, 
and the need for fundamental sentencing reform is one of the very few 
topics on which leading Democratic and Republican voices might be 
able to agree.

Rather than just calling for federal prosecutors to ease off on 
charges that could bring low-level drug offenders lengthy mandatory 
sentences, Holder should be advocating the repeal of most, if not 
all, federal mandatory minimum sentencing statutes. In addition to 
increasing the number of compassionate prison releases for medical 
reasons, Holder should set up procedures through which his department 
would make clemency recommendations to the president. And both the 
president and the attorney general should embrace the reality that 
most Americans have come to recognize that many aspects of our 
40-year war on drugs have been marked by criminal justice failures. 
Congress should be encouraged to work toward a true public health 
approach to marijuana reform and regulation.

Before a new course can be set, the criminal justice ship has to 
navigate away from the old "get-tough" course, and that won't be 
easy. So it's perhaps understandable that Holder is, for now, talking 
only about the need for bold steps rather than taking them. But 
because the political and economic winds (not to mention the moral 
ones) are all starting to blow in the same direction on federal 
sentencing reform, the administration shouldn't wait too long before 
sailing full speed ahead.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom