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- Date: Wed, 10 May 1995 18:26:48 -0500
- Message-Id: <9505102326.AA22278@dsm6.dsmnet.com>
- To: drctalk-l@netcom.com
- From: carlolsen@dsmnet.com (Carl E. Olsen)
- Subject: Just Say No To the War on Drugs
-
- COMMENTARY * CHRISTOPHER FREEMAN
-
- JUST SAY NO TO THE WAR ON DRUGS
-
- Harsh sentences for small-time dealers
- and users have gotten us nowhere
-
- In the coming weeks, Governor Terry Branstad will have the opportunity to
- sign a bill requiring those convicted of a second forcible felony to serve
- at least 85 percent of their maximum sentences.
- Buried in that common piece of legislation, however, is a far more
- interesting decree, one that might be called an apology, or an admission of
- guilt. The bill would waive mandatory minimum sentences for non-violent
- drug offenders.
- Here in Iowa we like to believe that knee-jerk solutions to serous
- problems are the excepfion rather than the rule. We like to believe that we
- have the decency to face our problems rather than lock them away.
- But things aren't always as they seem.
- Mandatory minimum sentences essentially take the judicial system away
- from the judges and the penal system away from the wardens. If you're
- convicted of a crime that falls under the mandataries umbrella, you serve
- whatever time the Legislature established. No good behavior, no parole.
- But what looks good on paper often fails in practice. A young offender
- with inadequate representation and a clean record is convicted of a
- non-violent drug offense, and thrown into prison with no incentive for moral
- development. As he rots, violent criminals come and go; nobody dares
- mention he would've been better off raping, robbing or murdering.
- The most recent wave of mandatory legislation began in the early '80s.
- Our leaders decided that drugs -- not poverty, insufficient education, etc.
- -- was the root of crime. With TV commercials, bumper stickers, T-shirts
- and key chains, they sold it better than Leo Burnett selling Marlboros.
- Everybody knows if it's on TV it must be true.
- If a public servant vows to get tough on crime, make the streets safe
- for our children again, put criminals behind bars where they belong, who'll
- disagree? It looks good on the evening news, it's sage, and from Council
- Bluffs to Keokuk we buy it.
- But mandatory minimums didn't appear out of nowhere. They're
- symptomatic of the unstable social and political climate we've created with
- the War on Drugs. Fear and paranoia have conquered rational discourse.
- Never mind that Iowa has the lowest rate of rape and second lowest
- murder rate in the nation.
- Never mind that Iowa's violent crime rate has always been comparable to
- those of the more civilized European nations.
- Never mind that experts estimate that 6 to 8 percent of all violent
- criminals are responsible for 60 to 80 percent of violent crime.
- As it turns out, the drug war meant we'd spend billions of dollars,
- ignore the Constitution, drive good judges from the bench with insanely
- misguided laws, fill the prisons with small-time dealers or abusers who
- might simply need treatment. And, in the end, improve nothing.
- According to the Justice Department, from 1982-'92 the average length
- of federal prison sentences for drug offenders increased by about 50
- percent. The average sentence for violent offenders actually decreased by
- about 34 percent. In 1992, the average drug offender's sentence was six
- months longer than the average rapist's.
- In Iowa, the rate of prisoners sentenced over the last 20 years has
- risen by about 285 percent -- a rise equal to the national average despite
- far less crime.
- Is that justice? No, that's the mandatory minimum, the latest casualty
- in a long, banal line of politically popular solutions. Perhaps someday we
- the people will decide that we want a more perfect union. For now, however,
- poverty grows, public schools get worse, prisons pop up like Wal-Marts and
- we pay the price -- in every way.
- Let's hope Branstad has the guts to be "soft on crime."
-
- Christopher Freeman is a freelance writer who lives in Ankeny.
-
- CITYVIEW 4 MAY 10, 1995
-
- Cityview is a weekly newspaper published by Business Publications
- Corporation, an Iowa corporation. Executive and editorial offices: The
- Depot at Fourth, 100 4th Street, Des Moines, Iowa 50309, (515) 288-3336, FAX
- (515) 288-0309.
-