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The American
Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU)
would like to
thank the United
States
Sentencing
Commission for
this opportunity
to testify on
cocaine
sentencing
policy and
federal
sentences for
cocaine
trafficking.
The ACLU is a
nonpartisan
organization
with hundreds of
thousands of
activists and
members with 53
affiliates
nationwide. Our
mission is to
protect the
Constitution and
particularly the
Bill of Rights.
Thus, the
disparity that
exists in
federal law
between crack
and powder
cocaine
sentencing
continues to
concern our
organization due
to the
implications of
this policy on
due process and
equal protection
rights of all
people. Equally
important to our
core mission are
the rights of
freedom of
association and
freedom from
disproportionate
punishment,
which are also
at risk under
this sentencing
regime.
The ACLU has
been deeply
involved in
advocacy
regarding race
and drug policy
issues for more
than a decade.
The ACLU
assisted in
convening the
first national
symposium in
1993 that
examined the
disparity in
sentencing
between crack
and powder
cocaine, which
was entitled
"Racial Bias in
Cocaine Laws."
The conclusion
more than 10
years ago of the
representatives
from the civil
rights, criminal
justice, and
religious
organizations
that
participated in
the Symposium
was that the
mandatory
minimum
penalties for
crack cocaine
are not
medically,
scientifically
or socially
justifiable and
result in a
racially biased
national drug
policy. In 2002,
we urged the
Commission to
amend the crack
guidelines to
equalize crack
and powder
cocaine
sentences at the
current level
for powder
cocaine. Four
years later, we
continue to urge
the Commission
to support
amendments to
federal law that
would equalize
crack and powder
cocaine
sentences at the
current level of
sentences for
powder cocaine.
Background and
History
In June 1986,
the country was
shocked by the
death of
University of
Maryland
basketball star
Len Bias in the
midst of crack
cocaine?s
emergence in the
drug culture.
Three days after
being drafted by
the Boston
Celtics, Bias,
who was African
American, died
of a drug and
alcohol
overdose. Many
in the media and
public assumed
that Bias died
of a crack
overdose.
Congress quickly
passed the 1986
Anti-Drug Abuse
Act motivated by
Bias? death and
in large part by
the notion that
the infiltration
of crack cocaine
was devastating
America?s inner
cities. Although
it was later
revealed that
Bias actually
died of a powder
cocaine
overdose, by the
time the truth
about Bias?
death was
discovered,
Congress had
already passed
the harsh
discriminatory
crack cocaine
law.
Congress
passed a number
of mandatory
minimum
penalties
primarily aimed
at drugs and
violent crime
between 1984
and1990. The
most notorious
mandatory
minimum law
enacted by
Congress was the
penalty relating
to crack
cocaine, passed
as a part of the
Anti-Drug Abuse
Act of 1986. The
little
legislative
history that
exists suggests
that members of
Congress
believed that
crack was more
addictive than
powder cocaine,
that it caused
crime, that it
caused psychosis
and death, that
young people
were
particularly
prone to
becoming
addicted to it,
and that crack?s
low cost and
ease of
manufacture
would lead to
even more
widespread use
of it. Acting
upon these
beliefs,
Congress decided
to punish use of
crack more
severely than
use of powder
cocaine.
On October
27, 1986, the
Anti-Drug Abuse
Act of 1986 was
signed into law
establishing the
mandatory
minimum
sentences for
federal drug
trafficking
crimes and
creating a 100:1
sentencing
disparity
between powder
and crack
cocaine. Members
of Congress
intended the
triggering
amounts of crack
to punish
?major? and
?serious? drug
traffickers.
However, the Act
provided that
individuals
convicted of
crimes involving
500 grams of
powder cocaine
or just 5 grams
of crack (the
weight of two
pennies) would
be sentenced to
at least 5 years
imprisonment,
without regard
to any
mitigating
factors. The Act
also provided
that those
individuals
convicted of
crimes involving
5000 grams of
powder cocaine
and 50 grams of
crack (the
weight of a
candy bar) be
sentenced to 10
years
imprisonment.
Two years
later,
drug-related
crimes were
still on the
rise. In
response,
Congress
intensified its
war against
crack cocaine by
passing the
Omnibus
Anti-Drug Abuse
Act of 1988. The
1988 Act created
a 5-year
mandatory
minimum and
20-year maximum
sentence for
simple
possession of 5
grams or more of
crack cocaine.
The maximum
penalty for
simple
possession of
any amount of
powder cocaine
or any other
drug remained at
no more than 1
year in prison.
The
100 to 1
Disparity in
Federal Cocaine
Sentencing Has a
Racially
Discriminatory
Impact and has
had a
Devastating
Impact on
Communities of
Color
Data on the
racial disparity
in the
application of
mandatory
minimum
sentences for
crack cocaine is
particularly
disturbing.
African
Americans
comprise the
vast majority of
those convicted
of crack cocaine
offenses, while
the majority of
those convicted
for powder
cocaine offenses
are white. This
is true, despite
the fact that
whites and
Hispanics form
the majority of
crack users. For
example, in
2003, whites
constituted 7.8%
and African
Americans
constituted more
than 80% of the
defendants
sentenced under
the harsh
federal crack
cocaine laws,
while more than
66% of crack
cocaine users in
the United
States are white
or Hispanic. Due
in large part to
the sentencing
disparity based
on the form of
the drug,
African
Americans serve
substantially
more time in
prison for drug
offenses than do
whites. The
average sentence
for a crack
cocaine offense
in 2003, which
was 123 months,
was 3.5 years
longer than the
average sentence
of 81 months for
an offense
involving the
powder form of
the drug. Also
due in large
part to
mandatory
minimum
sentences for
drug offenses,
from 1994 to
2003, the
difference
between the
average time
African American
offenders served
in prison
increased by
77%, compared to
an increase of
28% for white
drug offenders.
African
Americans now
serve virtually
as much time in
prison for a
drug offense at
58.7 months, as
whites do for a
violent offense
at 61.7 months.
The fact that
African American
defendants
received the
mandatory
sentences more
often than white
defendants who
were eligible
for a mandatory
minimum
sentence,
further supports
the racially
discriminatory
impact of
mandatory
minimum
penalties.
Over the last
20 years,
federal and
state drug laws
and policies
have also had a
devastating
impact on women.
In 2003, 58% of
all women in
federal prison
were convicted
of drug
offenses,
compared to 48%
of men. The
growing number
of women who are
incarcerated
disproportionately
impacts African
American and
Hispanic women.
African American
women?s
incarceration
rates for all
crimes, largely
driven by drug
convictions,
increased by
800% from 1986,
compared to an
increase of 400%
for women of all
races for the
same period.
Sentencing
policies,
particularly the
mandatory
minimum for
low-level crack
offenses,
subject women
who are
low-level
participants to
the same or
harsher
sentences as the
major dealers in
a drug
organization.
The
collateral
consequences of
the nation?s
drug policies,
racially
targeted
prosecutions,
mandatory
minimums, and
crack sentencing
disparities have
had a
devastating
effect on
African American
men, women, and
families. Recent
data indicates
that African
Americans make
up only 15% of
the country?s
drug users, yet
they comprise
37% of those
arrested for
drug violations,
59% of those
convicted, and
74% of those
sentenced to
prison for a
drug offense.
In 1986, before
the enactment of
federal
mandatory
minimum
sentencing for
crack cocaine
offenses, the
average federal
drug sentence
for African
Americans was
11% higher than
for whites. Four
years later, the
average federal
drug sentence
for African
Americans was
49% higher. As
law enforcement
focused its
efforts on crack
offenses,
especially those
committed by
African
Americans, a
dramatic shift
occurred in the
overall
incarceration
trends for
African
Americans,
relative to the
rest of the
nation,
transforming
federal prisons
into
institutions
increasingly
dedicated to the
African American
community.
The effects
of mandatory
minimums not
only contribute
to these
disproportionately
high
incarceration
rates, but also
separate fathers
from families,
separate mothers
with sentences
for minor
possession
crimes from
their children,
leave children
behind in the
child welfare
system, create
massive
disfranchisement
of those with
felony
convictions, and
prohibit
previously
incarcerated
people from
receiving social
services such as
welfare, food
stamps, and
access to public
housing. For
example, in 2000
there were
approximately
791,600 African
American men in
prisons and
jails. That same
year, there were
only 603,032
African American
men enrolled in
higher
education. The
fact that there
are more African
American men
under the
jurisdiction of
the penal system
than in college
has led scholars
to conclude that
our crime
policies are a
major
contributor to
the disruption
of the African
American family.
One of every
14 African
American
children has a
parent locked up
in prison or
jail today, and
African American
children are 9
times more
likely to have a
parent
incarcerated
than white
children.
Moreover,
approximately
1.4 million
African American
males ? 13% of
all adult
African American
men ? are
disfranchised
because of
felony
convictions.
This represents
33% of the total
disfranchised
population and a
rate of
disfranchisement
that is 7 times
the national
average. In
addition, as a
result of
federal welfare
legislation in
1996, there is a
lifetime
prohibition on
the receipt of
welfare for
anyone convicted
of a drug
felony, unless a
state chooses to
opt out of this
provision. The
effect of
mandatory
minimums for a
felony
conviction,
especially in
the instance of
simple
possession or
for very
low-level
involvement with
crack cocaine,
can be
devastating, not
just for the
accused, but
also for their
entire family.
Dispelling the
Myths Associated
with Crack
Cocaine with
Facts
The rapid
increase in the
use of crack
between 1984 and
1986 created
many myths about
the effects of
the drug in
popular culture.
These myths were
often used to
justify treating
crack cocaine
differently from
powder cocaine
under federal
law. For
example, crack
was said to
cause especially
violent
behavior,
destroy the
maternal
instinct leading
to the
abandonment of
children, be a
unique danger to
developing
fetuses, and
cause a
generation of
so-called ?crack
babies? that
would plague the
nation?s cities
for their
lifetimes. It
was also thought
to be so much
more addictive
than powder
cocaine that it
was ?instantly?
addicting.
In the twenty
years since the
enactment of the
1986 law, many
of the myths
surrounding
crack cocaine
have been
dispelled, as it
has become clear
that there is no
scientific or
penological
justification
for the 100:1
ratio. In 1996,
a study
published by the
Journal of
American Medical
Association
(JAMA) found
that the
physiological
and psychoactive
effects of
cocaine are
similar
regardless of
whether it is in
the form of
powder or crack.
For instance,
crack was
thought to be a
unique danger to
developing
fetuses and
destroy the
maternal
instinct causing
children to be
abandoned by
their mothers.
During the
Sentencing
Commission
hearings that
were held prior
to the release
of the
commission?s
2002 report on
Cocaine and
Federal
Sentencing
Policy, several
witnesses
testified to the
fact that
so-called myth
of ?crack
babies? who were
thought to
suffer from more
pronounced
developmental
difficulties by
their in-utero
exposure to the
drug was not
based in
science. Dr. Ira
J. Chasnoff,
President of the
Children?s
Research
Triangle,
testified before
the Sentencing
Commission that
since the
composition and
effects of crack
and powder
cocaine are the
same on the
mother, the
changes in the
fetal brain are
the same whether
the mother used
crack cocaine or
powder cocaine.
In addition,
Dr. Deborah
Frank, Professor
of Pediatrics at
Boston
University
School of
Medicine, in her
10-year study of
the
developmental
and behavioral
outcomes of
children exposed
to powder and
crack cocaine in
the womb, found
that ?the
biologic
thumbprints of
exposure to
these
substances? are
identical. Dr.
Frank added that
small but
identifiable
effects of
prenatal
exposure to
powder or crack
cocaine are
prevalent in
certain
newborns?
development, but
they are very
similar to the
effects
associated with
prenatal tobacco
exposure, such
as low birth
weight, height,
or head
circumference.
Crack was
also said to
cause
particularly
violent behavior
in those who use
the drug.
However, in the
2002 report on
Cocaine and
Federal
Sentencing
Policy, the
Commission
includes data
that indicates
that
significantly
less
trafficking-related
violence is
associated with
crack than was
previously
assumed. For
example, in
2000: 1) 64.8%
of overall crack
offenses did not
involve the use
of a weapon by
any participant
in the crime; 2)
74.5% of crack
offenders had no
personal weapons
involvement; and
3) only 2.3% of
crack offenders
actively used a
weapon.
Although by
2005 there was
an increase in
the percentage
of crack cases
that involved
weapons (before
the Booker
decision 30.7%
and after
27.8%), the
assertion that
crack
physiologically
causes violence
has not been
found to be
true. Most
violence
associated with
crack results
from the nature
of the illegal
market for the
drug and is
similar to
violence
associated in
trafficking of
other drugs.
Another of
the pervasive
myths about
crack was that
it was thought
to be so much
more addictive
than powder
cocaine that it
was ?instantly?
addicting. Crack
cocaine and
powder cocaine
are basically
the same drug,
prepared
differently.
The 1996 JAMA
study found that
the
physiological
and psychoactive
effects of
cocaine are
similar
regardless of
whether it is in
the form of
powder or crack.
The study also
concluded that
the propensity
for dependence
varied by the
method of
ingestion,
amount used and
frequency, not
by the form of
the drug.
Smoking crack or
injecting powder
cocaine brings
about the most
intense effects
of cocaine.
Regardless of
whether a person
smokes crack or
uses powder
cocaine, each
form of the drug
can be
addictive. The
study also
indicated that
people who are
incarcerated for
the sale or
possession of
cocaine, whether
powder or crack,
are better
served by drug
treatment than
imprisonment.
Federal Cocaine
Sentencing
Should Reflect
The Original
Legislative
Intent Of
Congress And
Focus On
High-Level Drug
Traffickers
Indeed, if
the message
Congress wanted
to send by
enacting
mandatory
minimums was
that the
Department of
Justice should
be more focused
on high-level
cocaine
traffickers,
Congress missed
the mark.
Instead of
targeting
large-scale
traffickers in
order to cut off
the supply of
drugs coming
into the
country, the law
established
low-level drug
quantities to
trigger lengthy
mandatory
minimum prison
terms. The
commission 2002
report states
that only 15% of
federal cocaine
traffickers can
be classified as
high-level,
while over 70%
of crack
defendants have
low-level
involvement in
drug activity,
such as street
level dealers,
couriers, or
lookouts.
Harsh
mandatory
minimum
sentences for
crack cocaine
have not stemmed
the trafficking
of cocaine into
the United
States, but have
instead caused
an increase in
the purity of
the drug and the
risk it poses to
the health of
users. The
purity of drugs
affects the
price and supply
of drugs that
are imported
into the
country. The
Office of
National Drug
Control Policy
below best
explains how
purity and price
are related to
reducing the
supply of drugs.
?The
policies and
programs of
the
National
Drug Control
Strategy
are guided
by the
fundamental
insight that
the illegal
drug trade
is a market,
and both
users and
traffickers
are affected
by market
dynamics. By
disrupting
this market,
the US
Government
seeks to
undermine
the ability
of drug
suppliers to
meet,
expand, and
profit from
drug demand.
When drug
supply does
not fully
meet drug
demand,
changes in
drug price
and purity
support
prevention
efforts by
making
initiation
to drug use
more
difficult.
They also
contribute
to treatment
efforts by
eroding the
abilities of
users to
sustain
their
habits.?
National
Drug Control
Strategy,
Office of
National
Drug Control
Policy, The
White House,
February
2006, page
17.
One
indication that
the National
Drug Control
Strategy has not
made progress in
cutting off the
supply of drugs
coming into this
country is the
fact that the
purity of
cocaine has
increased, but
the price of the
drug has
declined in
recent years. In
the context of a
business model,
declining prices
and higher
quality products
are what one
would commonly
expect from most
legitimate
products (i.e.
televisions,
computers and
cell phones),
but not from
illegal cocaine
trade. According
to ONDCP, for
cocaine from
1981 to 1996 the
retail price
declined
dramatically and
then rose
slightly through
2000. However,
the purity or
quality of
cocaine sold on
the streets is
twice that of
the early 1980s,
although
somewhat lower
than the late
1980s. As a
result there is
more cocaine
available on the
street at a
lower price.
This is a clear
indication that
the thrust of
this country?s
drug control
policy has not
properly focused
on prosecuting
high-level
traffickers in
order to reduce
the flow or
drugs coming
into the
country.
In the 1995
Commission
report on
Cocaine and
Federal
Sentencing
Policy, the Drug
Enforcement
Agency (DEA)
explained that
powder cocaine
is typically
imported into
the United
States in
shipments
?exceeding 25
kilograms and at
times reaching
thousands of
kilograms.?
These shipments
are generally
distributed to
various port
cities across
the country. In
the 2002, the
commission found
the
median
quantity of
drugs that
importers and
high-level
dealers were
convicted of
trafficking
consisted of
2962 grams of
crack cocaine
and 16,000 grams
of powder
cocaine. Even
though the DEA
recognizes that
importers ship
well over 25
kilograms at a
time into the
country, the
discussion about
what constitutes
a high-level
crack cocaine
trafficker
should at the
very least start
at the median
level of
approximately
3000 grams. We
should also look
to the 2002
report to begin
a dialogue about
the appropriate
drug quantity
levels for other
participants in
the drug trade.
The 2002 report
cited statistics
from 2000 for
median drug
quantities in
crack cocaine
case for
organizers
(509g), managers
(253g) and
street level
dealers (52g).
Increasing
Support in
Congress for
Changing the 100
to 1 Crack
Cocaine
Disparity
Several
members of 109th
Congress
introduced
legislation
addressing the
100 to 1
disparity
between federal
crack and powder
cocaine
sentences. Rep.
Charles Rangel?s
(D-NY) H.R.
2456, the Crack
Cocaine
Equitable
Sentencing Act
of 2005,
equalizes the
drug quantity
ratio at the
current level of
powder cocaine
and eliminates
the mandatory
minimum for
simple
possession. S.
3725, the Drug
Sentencing
Reform Act of
2006, sponsored
by Senator Jeff
Sessions (R-AL)
would reduce the
drug quantity
ratio to a 20:1
disparity by
increasing the
trigger level
for crack and
decreasing the
trigger quantity
amount for
powder cocaine
as well as
change the
mandatory
sentence for
simple
possession to
one year. In
addition, Rep.
Roscoe Bartlett
(R-MD)
introduced
legislation that
would equalize
trigger
quantities of
crack and powder
cocaine at the
current 5-gram
level of crack.
The ACLU
strongly opposes
any measures
that would lower
the amount of
powder cocaine
required to
trigger a
mandatory
minimum. Powder
cocaine
sentences are
already severe
and increasing
the number of
people
incarcerated for
possessing small
amounts of
cocaine is not
the answer to
the problem.
Additionally,
any measures
that decrease
the amount of
powder cocaine
would
disproportionately
impact minority
communities
because of the
disparate
prosecution of
powder cocaine
offenses. In
2000, 17.8% of
all powder
cocaine
defendants were
white, 30.5%
were black and
50.8% were
Hispanics. The
mandatory
sentences for
crack cocaine
and the
disparity with
powder cocaine
sentences have
created a legacy
that must come
to an end.
Conclusion and
Recommendations
October 2006
marked the
twentieth
anniversary of
the enactment of
1986 Anti-Drug
Abuse Act. In
the twenty years
since its
passage, many of
the myths
surrounding
crack cocaine
have been
dispelled, as it
has become clear
that there is no
scientific or
penological
justification
for the 100:1
sentencing
disparity ratio.
This sentencing
disparity has
resulted in
unwarranted
disparities
based on race.
Nationwide
statistics
compiled by the
Sentencing
Commission
reveal that
African
Americans are
more likely to
be convicted of
crack cocaine
offenses, while
Hispanics and
whites are more
likely to be
convicted of
powder cocaine
offenses. In
addition, many
of the
assumptions used
in determining
the 100:1 ratio
have been proven
wrong by recent
data. Scientific
and medical
experts have
determined that
in terms of
pharmacological
effects, crack
cocaine is no
more harmful
than powder
cocaine ? the
effects on users
is the same
regardless of
form. Finally,
Congress made it
explicitly clear
that in passing
the current
mandatory
minimum
penalties for
crack cocaine,
it intended to
target ?serious?
and ?major? drug
traffickers. The
opposite has
proved true:
mandatory
penalties for
crack cocaine
offenses apply
most often to
offenders who
are low-level
participants in
the drug trade.
For these
reasons, the
ACLU urges the
Commission to
recommend
amending the
federal
penalties for
trafficking,
distributing and
possessing crack
cocaine by
implementing the
following
recommendations:
-
The
quantities
of crack
cocaine that
trigger
federal
prosecution
and
sentencing
must be
equalized
with and
increased to
the current
levels of
powder
cocaine.
-
Federal
prosecutions
must be
properly
focused on
the
high-level
traffickers
of both
crack and
powder
cocaine.
-
In order
for judges
to exercise
appropriate
discretion
and consider
mitigating
factors in
sentencing,
mandatory
minimums for
crack and
powder
offenses
must be
eliminated,
including
the
mandatory
minimum for
simple
possession.
Thank you for
taking our views
into
consideration. |