CJPF'S ERIC E. STERLING AT COURT TV PANEL DISCUSSION
For more information, contact:
Eric E. Sterling, President
The Criminal Justice Policy Foundation
Tel. (301) 301-589-6020
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SILVER SPRING, MD – Eric E. Sterling, President of
the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation (CJPF), will
appear in a Court TV panel discussion at New York Law
School about the negative impact of mandatory minimum
drug sentencing laws on March 11 at 10:00 a.m. at 40
Worth Street, in New York City.
The panel discussion is a prelude to Court TV's March
13 premiere of Guilt By Association, the network's first
original movie about a woman who unwittingly becomes
a victim of the country's war on drugs after police
find her boyfriend to be dealing drugs. Such cases have
become common. Mandatory minimum laws, designed to keep
drugs and drug dealers off the streets, instead punish
many low-level participants with the harshest sentences.
Eric E. Sterling is all-too-familiar with the controversial
mandatory minimum laws -- he helped write them as Counsel
to the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on the
Judiciary in 1986. "This law came out of my word processor.
The enormity of our mistake is undoubtedly the low point
of my 26 years as a lawyer. Congress acted with terrible
haste and inadequate fact-finding," said Sterling.
There has been a dramatic increase in the number of
women victimized by mandatory minimum laws, leaving
children without mothers and families torn apart. Since
1986, the number of women incarcerated in state prisons
on drug charges increased 888%, according to The Sentencing
Project. Half of the total increase in women in America's
prisons from 1986 to 1996 was due to drug offenses.
In 1991, Mr. Sterling helped create Families Against
Mandatory Minimums (FAMM), a non-profit organization
that challenges the excessive penalties required by
mandatory minimum sentences. Since 1989, Mr. Sterling
has served as President of the Criminal Justice Policy
Foundation, a non-profit center that educates the nation
about criminal justice issues.
Court TV Panel Discussion: Monday March 11, 2002 10:00
a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Ernst Stiefel Room, New York Law School
40 Worth Street, Ground Floor New York City