WASHINGTON, DC - February 26 - On Tuesday, February 26, activists from around the country,
civil rights and professional organizations stood together to call for
much-needed reform to the country’s federal sentencing laws. This press briefing
and lobby event marked the culmination of a month-long series of events aimed at
addressing the 20-year-old sentencing disparity between crack and powder
cocaine. According to current guidelines, a conviction for the sale of 500 grams
of powder cocaine results in a 5-year mandatory minimum sentence, while the same
penalty is triggered for sale or possession of only 5 grams of crack cocaine.
"This 100:1 disparity in the mandatory minimum sentences for powder versus
crack cocaine is not only patently unjust, it is unwarranted by the facts," said
Caroline Fredrickson, director of the ACLU Washington Legislative Office. "In
the two decades since it was enacted, experts from the medical, scientific, and
criminal justice communities have all testified that there is no basis for the
sentencing disparity. It has been too long already; 2008 is the year Congress
must act to repair this injustice."
Jesselyn McCurdy, ACLU Legislative Counsel said: "When these mandatory
minimums were written into law in 1986, crack had recently emerged as an urban
boogeyman, about which there was no end of myths and exaggerations. It, and its
users, were demonized. Twenty years later, we know that crack has the same
effects on the body as powder cocaine. Now that we know better, we need to do
better. We urge Congress to return to the original intent of the law –
prosecuting high-level drug traffickers or leaders in the drug trade, rather
than non-violent, low-level offenders."
Even the U.S. Sentencing Commission (USSC), on four separate occasions, has
recommended that changes be made to the crack/powder sentencing structures,
finding no medical or legal basis for the sentencing disparity. The USSC has
repeatedly recommended that the sentencing disparities be lessened or eliminated
completely, citing in part the devastating effect such disparities have had on
African-American communities, and the perception that the criminal justice
system treats African-Americans unfairly.
Congress is currently considering several bills aimed at fixing this
injustice. A hearing titled "Federal Cocaine Sentencing Laws: Reforming the
100-to-1 Crack/Powder Disparity" was held February 12 in the Senate Judiciary
Subcommittee on Crime and Drugs, and a similar hearing will be held in the House
Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security on Tuesday,
February 26.
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