Going home early? Inmates like Hamedah Hasan could see their sentences shortened. Photo: ACLU
(11/02/11) Federal judges are beginning to review changes in sentencing guidelines that will shorten the sentences of thousands of men and women jailed on crack cocaine charges. The shift could affect inmates at the Federal prison in Ray Brook.
As Brian Mann reports, drug sentencing laws have been changing, based on concerns that crack laws unfairly targeted African Americans.
In the 1980s, when the crack epidemic was raging, Congress reacted by
setting penalties for crack cocaine that were a hundred times more
severe than penalties for cocaine in its powder form. The law swept up
thousands of low-level and nonviolent offenders.
Because
crack was cheaper and far more pervasive in black neighborhoods, the
vast majority of convictions involved African-Americans. Many were
locked up for decades.
Hamedah Hasan was a
young mother in 1993 when she was sentenced to serve 27 years behind
bars after she was caught running errands for a family member who sold
drugs.
"My release date from prison is Nov.
18, 2016. I humbly implore you to ask yourself ... if incarcerating a
nonviolent first-time offender for 23 1/2 years ... is truly justice
served," she said in a video produced by the American Civil Liberties
Union.
Critics point out that whites who generally used or sold powder cocaine drew far shorter sentences.
Last
year, Congress passed a bill easing crack sentences. The bill had
mostly Democratic support, but was backed by Republican Rep. Ron Paul,
who argued on the House floor that the original laws were designed to
clean up drug-wracked inner-city neighborhoods.
"It
turned out that it backfired. It actually hurt minorities. It didn't
help them, and here we are trying to correct this disparity," Paul said.
The
Fair Sentencing Act affects all future crack cocaine convictions. But
over the summer, the United States Sentencing Commission voted
unanimously to make the new crack guidelines retroactive.
So
beginning Tuesday, as many as 12,000 people like Hasan are eligible to
request that their prison sentences be sharply reduced.
"For
the past 25 years, the 100-to-1 crack/powder disparity has spawned
clouds of controversy and an aura of unfairness that has shrouded nearly
every federal crack cocaine sentence that was handed down pursuant to
that law. I say justice demands this result," said Ketanji Brown
Jackson, vice chairwoman of the sentencing commission, after the
decision was made.
Taking Hits
The
decision to make the Fair Sentencing Act retroactive drew fire from
members of Congress who blasted the sentencing commission, accusing the
panel of overstepping its authority. House Judiciary Committee Chairman
Lamar Smith—a Republican from Texas—opposed easing crack sentencing
guidelines for new offenders, as well.
"This
bill reduces the penalties for crack cocaine. Why would we want to do
that? We should not ignore the severity of crack addiction or ignore the
differences between crack and powder cocaine trafficking. We should
worry more about the victims than about the criminals," Smith said on
the House floor last year.
Prison reform advocates are also unhappy with the Fair Sentencing Act and say it didn't go far enough.
Jesselyn
McCurdy with the American Civil Liberties Union points out that
mandatory sentences for crack are still 18 times more severe than
guidelines set for powder cocaine.
"This is
an incremental step in trying to address the disparity, but we think the
only fair way to treat these two drugs is to treat them and punish them
in the same manner," says McCurdy.
Federal
judges will now decide case by case whether shorter sentences are
appropriate and whether early release could pose a risk for public
safety. That means communities won't see thousands of men and women
imprisoned during the crack epidemic arriving home all at once.