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- From: ottojg@freenet.tlh.fl.us (John G. Otto)
- Newsgroups: alt.politics.libertarian,talk.politics.drugs,talk.politics.guns
- Subject: War Crimes: The Prosecution Objects
- Date: Tue, 29 Mar 1994 17:46:30 +0400
- Message-ID: <ottojg-290394174630@hotline.cc.fsu.edu>
-
- FSU Research in Review Volume 5 #2 1994 Spring
- published by the FSU Office of the Vice President for Research
- 100 Sliger Building
- Innovation Park
- Tallahassee, FL 32306-3067
- 904-644-8634 904-644-8648
-
- Law & Disorder: How the Drug War is Wrecking American Justice
-
- Welfare State of Shame
- Scuba Science
- Tallahassee Taxol
- Stalin & Korea
-
- cover story, page 8: War Crime: Legacy of a Lost Cause
- A searing analysis by 2 FSU economists tells why the drug war not
- only is lost, but is a monster well on its way to killing what╒s left
- of America╒s system of law & order. by Frank Stephenson
-
- The Prosecution Objects
- by Ken Sukhia
-
- Our nation is caught in the grip of a violent crime epidemic with FL
- recording the highest crime rate in the nation for each of the last
- 10 years. In the face of this carnage, FSU professors Rasmussen &
- Benson ask us to believe that the real culprits are not so much the
- criminals themselves, but police, prosecutors & judges who ╥graze
- unbridled╙ through the grass lands of law enforcement, ╥plundering╙
- the ╥criminal justice commons╙ with little regard for what╒s in
- society╒s best interest. What╒s more, these selfless & dedicated
- public servants are said to commit this ╥abuse╙ for no higher ends
- than the enhancement of their own budgets & egos.
-
- As the theory goes, these professionals have ╥packed our prisons with
- people who shouldn╒t be there╙, the ╥vast majority╙ of whom are ╥2
- bit users & traffickers╙ & as a result truly violent offenders are
- being released too early.
-
- This theory is based on 3 major assumptions, all of which are
- erroneous.
-
- First, the problem in FL & elsewhere is not that certain crimes are
- treated seriously at the expense of others, but that as a rule state
- criminals are not being subjected to serious punishment, no matter
- what crimes they commit. Nationally, state inmates serve only 5.5
- years for homicide, 3.0 years for rape, 2.25 years for robbery & 1.25
- years for assault. In FL, the situation is so serious that 2 state
- attorneys actually sued to stop early releases, noting that ╥law
- abiding citizens are fed up with FL╒s revolving door criminal
- justice╙. Of the 140K felons convicted in FL last year, only 30,530
- made it to prison at all, & those who did served less than a third of
- their already low sentences. Nearly half of all FL prison inmates
- released in the 1st 6 months of 1993 served less than 6 months time.
- Moreover, in FL drug offenders spend less time in prison than
- virtually any other category of inmates & the number of drug
- offenders admitted to FL prisons has declined in each of the last 4
- years.
-
- Second, Rasmussen & Benson╒s distinction between drug offenders &
- violent criminals ignores a critical fact. Whether it takes the form
- of crime by addicts, intimidation by traffickers or the corruption of
- our nation╒s youth, violence is an inherent feature of the illicit
- drug trade. Dept of Justice surveys confirm that 28% of state
- prisoners incarcerated for murder & a third of those serving time for
- violent offenses were under the influence of drugs at the time of
- their crimes. According to the Bu of Justice Statistics, nearly 30%
- of all robberies & burglaries were committed by drug users to support
- their habits. Throughout the nation, law enforcement officials have
- repeatedly affirmed that drugs are the major cause of increased
- property & violent crimes in their communities. Despite such
- evidence, Rasmussen & Benson dismiss this notion as an ╥incorrect
- assumption╙ & a popular misbelief.
-
- Finally, there is simply no support for the assertion that the ╥vast
- majority╙ of drug inmates are ╥2 bit users & traffickers╙. Recent
- DOC studies show that 53% of FL╒s drug inmates previously served time
- for other offenses, with 29% having had 2 or more prior commitments
- to prison. These figures include only those prior convictions which
- actually resulted in prison time. Moreover, the claim that our state
- prisons are over-crowded with minor offenders, drug related or
- otherwise, is belied by the statistics from the National Institute of
- Justice showing that 95% of all state prisoners are repeat or violent
- offenders. The only way to obtain an accurate picture of the
- criminal characteristics of the inmate population serving time for
- drug offenses is to examine the criminal history & sentencing record
- for each offender, an analysis not undertaken by Rasmussen & Benson.
-
- A recent article on federal sentences in North FL illustrates the
- problem. A defense attorney had argued that federal sentences are
- too harsh, citing the case of a drug defendant who received a 46 year
- sentence. According to the attorney, this man was a ╥relatively
- minor drug offender╙ who ╥realistically (is) not a threat to
- society╙. The sentencing record revealed, however, that the
- defendant took a submachine gun to 1 cocaine deal, & on another
- occasion pointed a semi-automatic pistol at an under-cover officer &
- threatened, ╥Don╒t f--- with me or I╒ll kill you. I╒ve killed people
- for less.╙. Under the professors╒ approach, this inmate would be
- counted among the minor offenders who are clogging up the system.
-
- Even if all their assumptions were accepted as true, at the heart of
- Rasmussen & Benson╒s study is the false notion that either the
- democratic process doesn╒t work or the public doesn╒t know what╒s
- good for them. [???] The people of this nation have made a
- determination that drug use & drug trafficking are injurious to the
- common good. When law enforcement attempts to convert the will of
- the people into reality, they are not exercising ╥unbridled╙
- discretion. They are simply discharging their duty as
- representatives of the people. If there is any break-down between
- the will of the people & the actions of the criminal justice system,
- it is not that government is being too tough on drug offenders but
- that it is not being as tough on them as the public would like.
-
- The authors see the issue as a question of whether the public would
- prefer that a drug dealer go free in order to keep a known killer in
- prison. The more pertinent question is whether given the option the
- public would prefer that both the known killer & the drug dealer stay
- in prison. As countless public opinion surveys confirm, that is the
- clear will of the public.
-
- Rasmussen & Benson take special aim at presidents Reagan & Bush for
- their part in expanding the so-called war on drugs. Ironically,
- these presidents were responsible for restoring to the federal
- criminal justice system the type of integrity & confidence which the
- authors find so lacking in the state╒s. When I began service as an
- Assistant US Attorney in 1980 May, federal prisoners served less than
- a third of their sentences. Thanks to the Reagan & Bush
- administrations, federal prisoners now serve at least 87% of their
- terms, parole has been abolished, & violent offenders face tough
- mandatory sentences. Americans undoubtedly would sleep better at
- night, & work in more safety by day, if every state╒s sentencing
- scheme were as tough on crime as the federal system.
-
- For all their criticism of the drug war, the professors over-looked
- some telling evidence of its impact. The National Institute on Drug
- Abuse reports that, by the time president Bush left office, illegal
- drug use among all age groups had plummeted from its peak in 1979 to
- its lowest level since the surveys began.
-
- many of the beneficiaries of the Reagan/Bush war on drugs will never
- be known. They are the untold millions who managed to avoid being
- victimized by drugs & their inherent violence because of the many
- drug lords & traffickers who served the better part of their time in
- the ╥war╙ behind bars. Not a bad legacy to law enforcement
- professionals & other ╥abusers╙ of the common good.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- From 1990 to 1993, Kenneth W. Sukhia served as president Bush╒s
- appointment as US attorney for N FL. Today, he is director of the
- Criminal Justice Project of the James Madison Institute for Public
- Policy Studies & is a partner with the Fowler, White law firm in
- Tallahassee.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- Transcriber╒s note: I met KW Sukhia at a JMI forum. As the meeting
- was breaking up, one of the others asked him the subject of his most
- important current case. His answer was that they were prosecuting
- some women for wearing tonga swim suits in public.
-
- There are several problems with his ╥objections╙.
-
- He misunderstands what B&R ╥ask us to believe╙. They have pointed
- out that the incentive system created by the legislators, police,
- prosecutors & judges has the effect of discouraging them from
- optimizing the use of the resources available to them, and causes
- them to neglect some of the costs. B&R did not suggest that the
- members of the justice system are evil or solely motivated by their
- budgets and egos.
-
- Between 20% and 67% of arrests are for ╥crimes╙ which have no victims
- (the wide range is due to the coarseness of the data as well as
- variation over the past 20 years). Considering the more than 1M
- prisoners in federal & state prisons and, about the same number in
- local jails, it is not unreasonable to say that a significant number
- of inmates are likely to be people who should not be there.
- Of those there for ╥drug offenses╙, it would be very surprising if
- the vast majority were major wholesalers rather than users and
- 2 bit traffickers. The fact remains that violent offenders ARE
- sometimes released early due to ╥over-crowding╙ while victimless
- ╥criminals╙ are newly incarcerated is well established.
-
- In his discussion of sentencing and time served, he carefully
- neglects to mention the mandatory minimums on federal drug ╥crimes╙,
- nor does he notice the automatic additional penalties such as loss of
- right to vote, to petition for changes to the constitution, to carry
- fire arms, etc. which come with a felony conviction, regardless of
- time actually served in jail or prison. It is ironic that we╒ve
- given these public officials the power to disenfranchise a major
- portion of their opposition.
-
- Violence is, indeed, an inherent feature of the *illicit* drug trade.
- A point KWS misses is that it is largely caused by the fact that the
- trade is illicit. The supposition that less than 1/3 of violent
- criminals were taking illegal drugs at the time of their violent
- acts is irrelevant. It is the violent act which is to be condemned.
- He goes on to confuse assertion with evidence.
-
- Federal judges & state legislators have been stating at least since
- 1986 that the prison/jail system is ╥over-crowded╙. If there is 1
- inmate there for a victimless ╥crime╙ while a violent offender is
- set free, that is 1 victimless ╥crime╙ prisoner too many.
-
- His story of a minor drug ╥offender╙ who felt it necessary to defend
- himself with a submachine gun on one occasion and a hand gun on
- another does not indicate that he initiated force with either, merely
- that he warned the other person that he was ready to defend himself.
- Note that, if not for the drug war, and government violation of the
- 2nd amendment, this person would not be an ╥offender╙ at all, minor
- or major, based on the information related.
-
- Many of the victims of the FDR/Truman/Eisenhower/Johnson/Nixon/
- Ford/Carter/Reagan/Bush/Clinton... war on drugs will never be known.
- They are the untold tens of millions who have been victimized through
- murder, kidnapping, torture, home invasion (even nation invasion),
- bodily invasion, loss of financial & personal privacy, civil asset
- forfeiture... all prompted by that state of ╥war╙ itself.
- --
- jgo ottojg@freenet.tlh.fl.us
-
-
-