President Obama sent the strongest message on the insane waste of the nation's draconian sentencing laws when he granted clemency to 8 mostly low level drug offenders. Obama's clemencies for their drug crimes follow hard on the heels of Attorney General Eric Holder's virtual demand that U.S. Attorneys rethink how and who they prosecute for drug crimes. That followed even closer on the heels of Congress's passage of the Fair Sentencing Act. Before that the Supreme Court issued a ruling that modified the draconian sentence for a convicted cocaine peddler. Their actions wiped out much of the horrid disparity in the blatantly racially tinged sentences slapped on crack cocaine users.
The drug sentencing
disparities certainly have become a national embarrassment. But they are still on
the books. The U.S. Sentencing Commission and Congress now should go much
further and put an end to the embarrassment by totally scrapping all sentencing
disparities.
They have wreaked dire havoc in mostly poor black communities, as well as cast
an ugly glare on the failed and flawed war on drugs. Countless studies have
shown that blacks make up the overwhelming majority of those sentenced in
federal court for crack cocaine use and sale. Contrary to popular myth and drug
warrior propaganda, more than half of crack users are white, and presumably a
good portion of them are crack dealers as well. But it's the heart wrenching
tales of the legions of poor young men and women that have received sentences totaling
decades behind bars for the possession or sale of a pittance of cocaine or
marijuana. In many cases, they are young mothers and fathers who out of poverty
and desperation resorted to the use and sale of drugs.
What has ignited even
more outrage is that often their sentences have stood in stark contrast to the
sentences of murderers, rapists and bank robbers who in many cases have walked
out of prison years before the petty drug offenders. The sentences given to the
8 men and women Obama granted clemency too was a horrific example of that.
Their minimum sentence was 15 years. Some were serving life sentences. The end result of the bloated, grotesque drug
war is that the U.S.
with five percent of the planet's population has nearly 25 percent of its
inmates.
The myths about who uses drugs, their danger, and the injustice in sentencing
have been amply exposed in surveys such as one conducted by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention on the drug habits of Americans. It found that
whites are much more likely to use drugs than blacks.
Other studies have found roughly equal rates of drug usage by blacks and
whites. But what made the survey more eye-catching is that it didn't solely
measure generic drug use, but singled out the use of cocaine and street drugs.
The findings flew in the face of the conventional drug war wisdom that blacks
use and deal street drugs while whites use trendy, recreational designer drugs,
and that these presumably include powder cocaine. That again calls into
question the gaping disparity in drug sentencing between whites and blacks.
In the past federal prosecutors and lawmakers justified the disparity with the
retort that crack cocaine is dangerous and threatening, and leads to waves of
gang shoot-outs, turf battles, and thousands of terrorized residents in poor
black communities. In some instances, that's true, and police and prosecutors
are right to hit back hard at the violence. However, the majority of those who
deal and use crack cocaine aren't violence prone gang members, but poor, and
increasingly female, young blacks. They clearly need help, not jailing.
The drug warriors have and will continue to resist any effort to scrap the
blatant and deliberate racial disparity in drug sentencing laws. In an odd way,
they have to take their hard stand. The public scapegoating of blacks for
America's drug problem during the past two decades has been relentless. A frank
admission that the laws are biased and unfair, and have not done much to combat
the drug plague, would be an admission of failure. It could ignite a real soul
searching over whether all the billions of dollars that have been squandered in
the failed and flawed drug war -- the lives ruined by it, and the families torn
apart by the rigid and unequal enforcement of the laws -- has really
accomplished anything.
This might call into question why people use and abuse drugs in the first place
-- and if it is really the government's business to turn the legal screws on
some drug users while turning a blind eye to others?
Obama should be applauded for taking the long overdue and much clamored for big step toward restoring sanity to the drug sentencing laws. Now Congress should do what Obama has called for and once and for all end the insanity in the drug sentencing laws. It's a matter of simple justice.
Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is a frequent MSNBC contributor. He is an associate editor of New America Media. He is a weekly co-host of the Al Sharpton Show on American Urban Radio Network. He is the host of the weekly Hutchinson Report on KTYM 1460 AM Radio Los Angeles and KPFK-Radio and the Pacifica Network. Follow Earl Ofari Hutchinson on Twitter: http://twitter.com/earlhutchinson