Google – AFP, 12 August 2013
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Attorney
General Eric Holder speaks at the Department of Justice
on August 1, 2013
(AFP/File, Saul Loeb)
|
SAN
FRANCISCO, California — The United States announced plans Monday to reduce its
use of mandatory sentences for drug offenses in order to tackle a cycle of
poverty and incarceration in overcrowded jails.
In remarks
to the American Bar Association, Attorney General Eric Holder was to call
minimum jail terms "counterproductive," according to excerpts from
his speech released in advance.
Holder says
the United States should remain strict but be smarter about tackling crime.
And he
warned that, while the total US population has increased by a third since 1980,
the prison population has soared by 800 percent.
The United States
accounts for five percent of the world population but nearly a quarter of all
people imprisoned, he said.
"Today,
a vicious cycle of poverty, criminality, and incarceration traps too many
Americans and weakens too many communities. However, many aspects of our
criminal justice system may actually exacerbate this problem, rather than
alleviate it," Holder was to say.
And of
219,000 people jailed in federal as opposed to state-run prisons, nearly half
were convicted of drug-related offenses.
Altogether,
inmates in local, state and federal prisons cost the government $80 billion
dollars in 2010 alone, he added, saying it was time for reform.
"We
can start by fundamentally rethinking the notion of mandatory minimum sentences
for drug-related crimes. Some statutes that mandate inflexible sentences --
regardless of the facts or conduct at issue in a particular case -- reduce the
discretion available to prosecutors, judges, and juries," Holder said.
He added:
"They breed disrespect for the system. When applied indiscriminately, they
do not serve public safety. They have had a disabling effect on communities.
And they are ultimately counterproductive."
The
mandatory minimum sentences were included in the penal code by Congress in 1986
and 1988.
Holder said
he hoped Congress would pass new legislation but in the meantime he has
mandated a modification of the Justice Department's charging policies.
Holder said
that under the changes certain low-level, nonviolent drug offenders who have no
ties to large-scale organizations, gangs, or cartels will no longer be charged
with offenses that impose draconian mandatory minimum sentences.
"They
now will be charged with offenses for which the accompanying sentences are
better suited to their individual conduct, rather than excessive prison terms
more appropriate for violent criminals or drug kingpins," he said,
according to a draft of his speech.
In a
further effort to ease the prison population, Holder announced a change to
allow for early release of elderly inmates who did not commit violent crimes
and have served significant portions of their sentences.
The
American Civil Liberties Union welcomed the changes enthusiastically.
"Today,
the attorney general is taking crucial steps to tackle our bloated federal mass
incarceration crisis, and we are thrilled by these long-awaited
developments," it said in a statement.
"While
today's announcement is an important step toward a fairer justice system,
Congress must change the laws that lock up hundreds of thousands of Americans
unfairly and unnecessarily," the ACLU added.
In 2010
President Barack Obama won passage of a law establishing more equality in
sentences for convictions for possessing crack and cocaine. They were stiffer
for crack, and most of those convicted of this were black.
That law
also did away with mandatory minimum sentences for first time crack possession
offenses. It was the first such minimum sentencing elimination since the 1970s.
![]() |
'We were
handcuffing kids for no reason,' officer Adhyl Polanco
testified in the
landmark 10-week trial. Photograph: Mario
Tama/Getty Images
|
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