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Mr. Chairman, members of the Committee, thank you
for the opportunity to testify before you regarding
bill 12-12. My name is Eric E. Sterling. I am the President
of the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation, which has
been located in the District since it was founded in
1989. Since 1979, I have lived, owned property, and
worked in the District of Columbia for many years.
Mandatory minimum sentences are deja vu
Today the Committee is considering a bill to re-establish
mandatory minimum sentences for various drug offenses
that violate the District of Columbia Code. I feel a
little bit of deja vu. In 1986 I was counsel to the
House Subcommittee on Crime. For the previous six years
my responsibilities had been to oversee Federal drug
enforcement for the House Judiciary Committee. In the
summer of 1986 the Congress hastily adopted mandatory
minimum sentences that I helped write, and those laws
have become among the most reviled Acts of Congress
in recent years. In 1995 the Council repealed the mandatory
minimum sentences that had been the law. I urge the
Committee to reject most of the bill before it today.
The "message" of mandatory sentences to judges and
prosecutors
You have heard many times today statements about sending
the right message and sending the wrong message, especially
sending a message to our youth. Consider for a moment
the message that enactment of mandatory minimum sentences
sends to judges of the Superior Court. A mandatory minimum
sentence enacted by a legislative body is a vote of
"no confidence" in the intelligence and responsibility
of the judges.
The enactment of mandatory minimum sentences says,
"D.C. Judges, we don't trust you to impose an appropriate
sentence upon the criminal who stands convicted before
you. D.C. Judges, we don't trust you to weigh adequately
the evidence of the seriousness of the crime, and the
record of recidivism and impose punishment that is adequate.
D.C. Judges, we don't trust you to adequately find the
facts of the case and to apply them." That, I submit,
is a very damning message for this Council and the people
of the District of Columbia to send to the Judges of
the Superior Court.
Some of you have heard it said that constitutional
restrictions upon police practices, such as the Miranda
warnings that must be given to suspects before they
are interrogated, have had the effect of "handcuffing"
the police. Do you think that mandatory sentencing laws
are any less a "handcuffing" of Judges, appointed by
the President of the United States from among the finest
lawyers in the District of Columbia, and approved by
the United States Senate. For you to pass a mandatory
minimum sentence is a statement of contempt to the District's
Judges.
What is the message to the community, to our youth,
as well as the bench and bar to say, by a law such as
this, "Our judges are too stupid to trust with the discretion
to impose a just and appropriate sentence?" That is
a terrible message to send.
The message to the U.S. Attorney's Office
There is another message that you are sending. You are
telling the U.S. Attorney's office that Council of the
District of Columbia doesn't trust you to exercise your
prosecutorial discretion appropriately.
Unlike every other local prosecutor in the nation,
the local prosecutor here, the U.S. Attorney, can bring
any serious drug case into U.S. District Court. Congress
in the Narcotics Penalties and Enforcement Act of 1986,
which I helped write, provides for very long sentences
and long minimum sentences for not very serious drug
traffickers.
The DC Code provides for long maximum sentences right
now. A seller of cocaine, heroin, PCP, methamphetamine
or other narcotic or abusive drug -- the most serious
and dangerous drugs of abuse -- can be sentenced for
a term of imprisonment of up to 30 years and a fine
of up to a half million dollars (sec. 33-541(a)(2)(A)).
These penalties apply to all participants in conspiracies
or attempts to sell such drugs (DC Code section 33-549).
Under the Federal law, if the sale involves as little
as a detectable amount of such drugs, the sentence is
up to 20 years imprisonment and a fine of up to $1 million
for a first offense -- and for any prior Federal, state,
or local drug offense, up to 30 years and a $2 million
fine (21 USC 841(b) (1)(C)).
In addition, under Federal law, for any kind of drug
trafficker who is more serious than a common retailer
-- who is only a first offender, there is a mandatory
prison term of 5 years, with a potential sentence of
up to 40 years imprisonment and a $2 million fine. This
mandatory sentence is for sales for drugs (and is also
triggered by participating in a conspiracy or attempted
sales of drugs (21 USC 846)) of any level of purity
or impurity with an accumulated weight of as little
as 1 gram of LSD; 5 grams of crack cocaine; 10 grams
of methamphetamine; 10 grams of fentanyl analogue; 40
grams of fentanyl; 100 grams of a mixture of PCP (or
10 grams of pure PCP); 100 grams of heroin; or 500 grams
of cocaine. A second offender faces a doubled mandatory
minimum (ten years), a $4 million fine, and up to life
imprisonment. (21 USC 841(b)(1)(B)).
The mandatory minimum prison terms provided for in
this bill are unnecessary if we give any credit to the
Office of the U.S. Attorney to make proper choices about
how to prosecute major level offenders by using the
laws available to it.
In addition, the proposed amendment does not provide
for a reduction of sentence to defendants who provide
"substantial assistance" to the Government, as does
the Federal law. The lack of such a provision would,
in a sense, "handcuff" the U.S. Attorney with mandatory
sentences under either body of law. This would potentially
limit that office's ability to induce defendants to
cooperate in the investigation and prosecution of more
serious offenders.
Mandatory minimum sentences send the wrong message.
Mandatory Minimum Sentences Are Bad Policy
Injustice
Because mandatory minimum sentences forbid judges
from considering the facts of the case and imposing
the appropriate sentences for minor offenders, they
lead to injustice.
What do the Judges with the most experience with mandatory
minimum sentences -- the nation's Federal Judges --
think about them? Let me quote the resolution of the
United States District Judges of the Fifth Circuit (Texas,
Louisiana and Mississippi) at their judicial conference
on May 6, 1991, "The proliferation of mandatory sentences
distorts the rationality [of the sentencing system]
because such sentences apply regardless of the defendant's
role in the offense and of other factors historically
found relevant to sentencings. As a result, they
also often require the imposition of sentences which
are manifestly unjust." (emphasis added)
The U.S. Judges of the Seventh Circuit Judicial Council
found that, "mandatory minimum sentences, however framed,
do not result in advancing the cause of justice and
fairness." The judges voted unanimously to urge
Congress to "repeal all statutes that require
the trial judge to impose a mandatory minimum sentence."
(Quoted in Special Report to Congress: Mandatory
Minimum Penalties in the Federal Criminal Justice System,
August 1991, U.S. Sentencing Commission, p. G-19).
The Ninth Circuit District Judges and the Tenth Circuit
District Judges found that mandatory minimum sentences
are manifestly unjust and harsh.
Here in the District of Columbia, in March 1990, the
Judicial Council of the D.C. Circuit, after finding
that sentences imposed under mandatory minimum sentences
are often "manifestly unjust," adopted a resolution
urging Congress in their polite words "to reconsider
the wisdom of all mandatory minimum sentencing statutes."
The fact is that every Federal Judicial Council has
adopted a resolution calling upon Congress to reconsider
the mandatory minimum sentences that they adopted.
Cost
In 1991, The U.S. Sentencing Commission estimated
that mandatory minimum sentencing generated between
$79 million and $125 million in additional costs for
incarcerating prisoners (in FY 1990). (Special Report
to Congress, Aug. 1991, p. 117). Mandatory minimum sentences
are designed to impose longer sentences than are currently
imposed. I suggest that it would be irresponsible
to pass this bill without a careful estimate of what
the bill's real costs are going to be.
Ineffective
In 1973 New York State adopted mandatory minimum sentences
for drug offenses. The Association of the Bar of the
City of New York and the Drug Abuse Council, Inc. established
a joint committee to evaluate the mandatory minimum
sentences. They found that the 1973 law did not significantly
deter prior felony offenders from committing additional
crimes. (THE NATION'S TOUGHEST DRUG LAW: EVALUATING
THE NEW YORK EXPERIENCE, Final Report of The Joint Committee
on New York Drug Law Evaluation, 1977, p. 9).
Counterproductive
Some observers have suggested that the mandatory minimum
sentences adopted by the Congress in 1986 resulted in
an increase in the use of youth in the sale of illegal
drugs. Laws which have the effect of creating incentives
for young people to enter into a life of crime will
have a terrible effect on the District of Columbia.
The details of the bill
This bill is called the Distribution of Marijuana
Amendment Act of 1997, but this is a misleading title
because the bill creates mandatory minimum sentences
for all drug offenses.
Cannabis Scheduling
Turning our attention first to the cannabis scheduling
provisions. The bill would transfer cannabis from Schedule
V to Schedule III of the five schedules of controlled
substances. The placement of a drug in a schedule is
a comparative matter based upon relative potential for
abuse. The statute does not define the term "potential
for abuse," or the term "abuse."
What schedule for cannabis?
In considering where cannabis belongs, consider that
cocaine and most of the opiates that are similar to
heroin, such as morphine, are in schedule II. Barbiturates
in schedule III and tranquilizers in schedule IV are
major factors in drug overdose deaths and hospital emergency
room mentions. Consider that in 1995 there were 531,827
drug-related hospital emergency room episodes (this
means person going to an emergency room and mentioning
a drug as a factor in why they were present). Each drug
that is mentioned is a drug mention. In 1995, there
were 931,550 drug mentions. Of the drugs mentioned,
cocaine was mentioned 142,494 times, heroin 76,023 times,
cannabis only 47,069 times. The balance of the mentions
were drugs overwhelmingly drugs in schedules II, III,
and IV. Cannabis, responsible for only 5% of the mentions,
simply is not a big factor. Cannabis is not a factor
in drug overdose deaths, a significant proportion of
which are legal schedule II, III and IV drugs, as well
as cocaine and heroin.
On the basis of potential for abuse, morbidity or
mortality, cannabis is one of the least dangerous of
drugs. Schedule V is a much more reasonable place for
cannabis than schedule III with lethal and addictive
compounds.
Penalties
The bill would establish mandatory minimum penalties
for cannabis trafficking offenses as well as other for
trafficking in other drugs. For the reasons cited above,
this would be a mistake.
Definition of conviction
An important corrective amendment in this bill is
the proposed amendment to DC Code section 33-541(g)
to define the term "offense" so that all convictions
are considered offenses. This is the only useful provision
of the bill. I encourage the committee to report this
single provision.
What is the real message of mandatory minimum sentences?
While public officials voting for mandatory minimum
sentences claim they are variously sending messages
to the youth or to the drug traffickers, this is not
true. The message that is really important to legislators
is a message to the voters: "I'm doing something about
your fear of crime." There is nothing intrinsically
wrong with telling the voters that you are attempting
to address their concerns -- unless the measure is expensive,
unjust, and counter-productive.
Of course, the public is afraid of crime. D.C.'s violent
crime rate leads the nation, although it no longer has
the highest murder rate of a city in the nation. D.C.'s
1994 murder rate of 70 per 100,000 was only exceeded
by New Orleans' rate of 85.8 per 100,000. The national
average murder rate was 9.0 per 100,000 in 1994. While
national murder rates have been declining, in the first
half of 1996, the murder rate increased in Washington.
In the first half of 1996 there were 199 homicides compared
with 158 homicides in 1995. ("Violent Crime Continues
to Decline, FBI Reports," Washington Post, January 6,
1997, p. A7)
Fear of crime measurements
Nationally, fear of crime has drifted down from the
record levels of 1994. The Gallup Poll has asked the
nation for many years what the most important problem
is facing the country. In October 1982, 61% said unemployment
and 3% said crime and violence. In January 1985, 27%
said fear of war and 4% said crime and violence. In
November 1989, 38% said drugs and drug abuse and 3%
said crime and violence. In March 1992, 42% said the
economy and 5% said crime and violence. But in August
1994, 52% said crime and violence, 17% said the economy,
6% said unemployment, and 9% said drugs. By May 1996,
crime and violence was down to 25%, drugs were 10%,
the Federal budget deficit was 15%, the quality of education
was 13% (the highest it had ever been) and moral decline
in society was at a record high at 14% as the most important
problem facing the country. (Sourcebook of Criminal
Justice Statistics, 1995, table 2.1, p. 128).
Fear of crime has grown for two reasons. First, even
though crime rates have been going down nationally for
the past five years, the volume of crime news has increased.
The Center on Media and Public Affairs, in tracking
the coverage of violent crime on television, found that
the volume of violent crime stories had increased by
300% in the early 1990s. The first rule of television
news directors is, "If it bleeds, it leads." The public,
which does not study crime statistics from the U.S.
Department of Justice, judges crime rates, that is,
the prevalence of crime by assessing the volume of crime
news that they receive.
Crime sells. Violent crime is the basis of dozens
of hours of prime-time television entertainment. The
advertising on television news is a major revenue source
for local television stations. Crime news draws viewers.
Consider how often during the evening a 15-second spot
advises about the latest horrifying crime story, with
"details at eleven." The decision by advertising directors
and programming managers of television stations to highlight
news of crime is the leading factor in creating the
false impression that America is getting more violent
and that the crime rate is increasing.
The second factor in the increased prominence of crime
as the nation's leading problem is that the cold war
has ended, international tensions are reduced, and the
economy is very strong. Unemployment is low, interest
rates are low, and Wall Street is reaching historic
highs. Crime is relatively a more serious problem.
When politicians vote for mandatory sentencing they
are trying to convince the public they are doing something
dramatic about what the public is afraid of. Legislators
can actually do very little directly to convince the
public that they are doing something about crime. Council
members can't arrest criminals like the police chief,
flanked by the Mayor. Council members can't announce
indictments like the U.S. Attorney. Council members
can't announce a guilty verdict at a trial like a judge.
If they want to claim they are fighting crime, council
members can simply pass longer sentences -- even if
the longer sentences are expensive, unjust, and counter-productive.