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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Attorney General Wants Review Of Cocaine Sentences
Title:US: Attorney General Wants Review Of Cocaine Sentences
Published On:2009-06-24
Source:Charlotte Observer (NC)
Fetched On:2009-06-26 04:46:05
ATTORNEY GENERAL WANTS REVIEW OF COCAINE SENTENCES

WASHINGTON Attorney General Eric Holder sought support Wednesday for
erasing the gap in prison sentences for crack and powder cocaine
crimes, a disparity that hits black defendants the hardest.

The effort to change federal sentencing laws for cocaine has broad
support but may still unravel amid disagreements about how equal the
sentences should be, and whether the whole sentencing system needs to
be changed.

"One thing is very clear: We must review our federal cocaine
sentencing policy," Holder said at a legal discussion sponsored by the
Congressional Black Caucus.

Under current law, it takes 100 times more powdered cocaine than crack
cocaine to trigger the same harsh, mandatory minimum sentences.

"This administration firmly believes that the disparity in crack and
powdered cocaine sentences is unwarranted," Holder said. "It must be
eliminated."

The law was passed in the 1980s during the spread of crack in American
cities, which officials blamed for a rise in violence. Yet in the
years since, worries about crack have declined.

The most recent government figures show that 82 percent of crack
offenders are African-American, while just 9 percent of them are white.

In remarks at the Congressional Black Caucus event, Supreme Court
Justice Stephen Breyer, who helped craft the sentencing guidelines
that now are the subject of so much criticism and debate, urged
Congress to focus first on the laws creating mandatory minimums for
certain crimes.

"My goodness, those mandatory minimums drive (sentencing) guidelines
in 100 different ways," Breyer said.

The justice acknowledged that curtailing mandatory minimums is not
politically popular, or easy. "It's very, very hard to explain to
people," he said.

The Obama administration wants to change the law to end the 100-to-1
ratio in sentencing, and make it strictly 1-to-1. Some lawmakers also
want to change the law but aren't sure it should be reduced that
drastically. There also is debate over whether to close the gap by
raising the penalty for powder cocaine, in addition to lowering the
penalty for crack.

Holder, the nation's top law enforcement officer and a former judge in
Washington, D.C., said that juries have acquitted black defendants
because they knew the suspects faced what jurors viewed as an unfairly
long prison sentence.

The 100-to-1 ratio "is racial discrimination in practice," said Rep.
Bobby Scott, D-Va., who is pushing legislation that would end the gap
by eliminating crack as a category in the criminal code.

"I think there is a complete consensus that the present pattern for
sentencing crack and powder is absurd," Scott said. "There is not
complete consensus about what to do about it."

Mark Osler, a law professor at Baylor University and a former
prosecutor, said there is general agreement on changing the law on
crack cocaine but that any such change is likely to lead to other,
more difficult questions.

"Going to 1-to-1 is a big change. The question that really hasn't been
resolved is 1-to-1 at what level. Is the penalty for cocaine powder
going up?" Osler asked. "Also, there's a general consensus that we'll
see something happen with crack. I'll be very interested to see if
they argue for a move toward broader reform in sentencing."

The Bush administration fought vigorously to preserve the current drug
law that President Barack Obama, Democrats and some Republicans say is
unfair and outdated. Individual prosecutors and judges have also
criticized the law.
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