Opinion
Recent crack cocaine ruling brings early
Christmas present for some African Americans
Marc H. Morial
Christmas
may have come early this year for the families of thousands of federal
inmates with crack cocaine convictions, thanks to recent actions by the
U.S. Supreme Court, President Bush and the U.S. Sentencing Commission.
Back in the 1980s, at the height of the crack epidemic in urban
America, our nation’s leaders labored under the misconception that the
less expensive form of cocaine was much more addictive than its powder
form, based on the testimony of an “expert” government witness.
Distorted visions of crack babies overtaking inner cities danced in
their heads, much to the detriment of fair and reasonable public policy.
As a result, Congress mandated harsher sentences for possession and
distribution of crack. Under the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986, those
convicted of possessing 50 grams of crack cocaine faced the same amount
of time behind bars as those convicted of possessing and/or selling 100
times as much of the powder form.
The result? Prisons swelled with petty criminals, rather than the drug
kingpins of the world. A disproportionate number of those — as much as
85 percent — were African American.
“For two decades, the United States has pursued, prosecuted and
sentenced cocaine offenders in a way that borders on insanity —
targeting petty criminals over serious drug dealers — while fostering
contempt, instead of respect, for the policies that have sent tens of
thousands to jail,” wrote Ellis Cose in a recent Newsweek online column.
In a 7-2 decision handed down last month, the Supreme Court decided to
give federal judges leeway in sentencing for crack convictions. The
case in question involved a Desert Storm veteran named Derrick
Kimbrough who was found to possess crack, powder cocaine and a gun,
offenses that should have sent him to prison for two decades or more.
Had he possessed only powder cocaine, he would have faced half the
sentence, concluded Judge Raymond Jackson, who presided over the trial,
in giving Kimbrough a lesser-than-mandated 15-year sentence. An appeals
court overruled Jackson’s decision, only to be reversed by the nation’s
highest court.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who co-authored the decision with John
Paul Stevens, concluded that if powder and crack cocaine, which is the
product of powder cocaine and baking soda crystallized, possess “the
same physiological and psychotropic effects,” then their users should
be treated the same. The ruling deemed the 1986 law that created the
disparate sentencing guidelines as “disproportionate and unjust.”
Then, in a rare exhibition of mercy a few hours after the decision,
President Bush cut the sentence of Michael D. Short, who had been
convicted of aiding a crack cocaine ring, one year short. It is one of
only five commutations granted during his presidency.
A day later, the U.S. Sentencing Commission announced that up to 20,000
federal inmates with crack convictions could be eligible for sentence
reductions.
Graham Boyd, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s drug
reform project, described the recent court decision to Newsweek as the
first since the mid-1980s “that actually talks about justice, that
seems to have some blood in it.”
These recent developments provide some relief not just for the
incarcerated, but also for the families they left behind.
Karen Garrison — a Washington, D.C., mother of twin sons who were
jailed in 1998 on crack offenses — is just one of many beneficiaries of
the recent sentencing decision and subsequent developments. She told
The Associated Press that she can now “just plan some kind of life”
with her sons possibly on their way home.
Unfortunately, the U.S. Justice Department has sounded unwarranted
alarms over the sentencing commission’s decision, contending that it
would result in unleashing thousands of “dangerous prisoners, many of
them violent gang members” back into communities ill-equipped to handle
them, according to a statement by acting Deputy Attorney General Craig
S. Morford.
The department probably wouldn’t be as worried over the prospect of a
“mass” inmate release if Uncle Sam made prisoner re-entry programs a
priority in the first place.
Overall, the latest developments toward eliminating sentencing
disparities are likely to have a limited impact because the vast
majority of drug convictions come out of state courts. According to the
U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, state convictions outnumbered those
from federal courts by a 15-to-1 ratio in 2004.
Nevertheless, the recent course of events is important. What happens on
the federal level could change the course of history at the state
level. But Congress must first act to ensure that the disparities in
sentencing are eliminated for good. The recent events by no means
guarantee an end to harsh punishments for crack offenders. Our nation’s
lawmakers must give the justice system and its enforcers direct and
clear guidance just like they did in the 1980s when they decided to
hold small-time crack dealers to a more stringent standard than their
drug kingpin counterparts.
Marc H. Morial is the president and CEO of the National Urban League.