Yesterday the U.S. Sentencing Commission released its report on the estimated impact of the retroactive application of the so-called "crack minus two" guideline amendment it sent to Congress last May. The figures are significant and provide new hope that nearly 20,000 prisoners serving sentences for crack cocaine offenses could see their sentences reduced by an average of more than two years.
Among the findings:
The crack cocaine amendment is not yet retroactive. The Sentencing Commission will vote sometime this fall on whether to make the amendment retroactive.
Quick review of 2007 crack amendment
On May 1, 2007, the Sentencing Commission sent to Congress a guideline amendment that proposed to reduce crack cocaine sentences by lowering base offense levels for all crack cocaine convictions by two levels. For instance, drug quantities that formerly triggered a level 34 guideline range (151-188 months), would instead trigger a level 32 guideline range (121-151 months). Congress has six months to reject the amendment and if it takes no action the amendment will automatically become effective on November 1, 2007. We anticipate that the amendment will become effective this November without opposition.
FAMM led an effort to support the crack cocaine guideline change when it was proposed in April 2007. We understood that it represented the first in what we hope will be a number of steps to lower crack sentences and the first real relief for crack defendants since the Commission's failed attempt in 1995 to treat crack the same as powder cocaine.
As proposed, the crack guideline would apply only to people sentenced after it becomes effective on November 1. And so, since May, FAMM has waged a vigorous campaign to persuade the Sentencing Commission to make the new crack guideline retroactive so it could benefit eligible crack prisoners. Fairness dictates the changes apply to prisoners serving the unjust crack cocaine sentences that prompted the Commission to act.
The Commission has already heard from thousands of individuals, asking that the amendment be made retroactive. If you have not told the Commission how you feel, it is not too late to ensure your views are heard. The Commission is seeking public comment until November 1. Visit http://capwiz.com/famm/home/ on the FAMM website to insure that all crack defendants benefit from this promising first step toward sentencing fairness.
What is FAMM?
Families Against Mandatory Minimums (FAMM) is the national voice for fair and proportionate sentencing laws. We shine a light on the human face of sentencing, advocate for state and federal sentencing reform, and mobilize thousands of individuals and families whose lives are adversely affected by unjust sentences. To join FAMM, please visit www.famm.org. If you are a member of the media and wish to speak to a FAMM representative about these changes, or to arrange an interview with people affected by mandatory sentencing laws, please email media@famm.org.
Comments
HEY! Any "foundlings" among the findings?
HA! I CRACK myself up!
Seriously, folks, this stuff grabs me. I have a thing for feeling trapped. It's the story of my life. Call it being where I don't want to be, or feeling like I just don't fit-in because it's not a natural situation, I don't know. A kid knows when his/her parents are f'ed up. A kid knows when they should have gotten a pet, not a child. A kid knows a vasectomy or neutering is better than giving birth because "The Church says so".
Why are so many people letting others make decisions based on documents written by people hundreds of years ago?
HOW MANY FRIGGEN AMMENDMENTS DO WE FREAKING NEED BEFORE IT'S ALL NULL AND VOID?!?
At this point, we're more like the UK than NOT!
HOLY SHIT!
Are we not the only two camps still fighting in Iraq? I don't even know. I stopped watching the news, it scares me to death to watch that crap! I have a goldfish. I named him Barry. He keeps bumping into his reflection and I feed him Triscuits. He's my poor-girl's science experiment. Lets' see how long he lives. So far he's going on 5 days. Momma is mighty proud. If he lasts the weekend I might buy him a fish-bowl. (Right now he's living in a measuring glass). It's ok, I don't cook.
People wonder why teens turn to drugs?
Turn on the freaking TV!
Teachers want students to watch the news.
Why? So they can share the misery? Leave that to the grown-ups.
It's too much, especially if mom and pop are too busy with their jobs to text a message that they "I
u2!" See, that's what our wealthy parents teach us: " ignore it, it will all go away, and if it doesn't we'll buy you new stuff to replace it to make it all better."
My mom gave me a key to get in the house. That was it. I didn't want a key. I wanted a mommy.
Could you imagine that happening now? I bet a parent would be arrested and be placed among crack-heads in prison.
Now wouldn't that be a picture worth taking? I wonder how many "hardened criminals" are actually parents who really miss their kids.
I wonder how many kids miss their parents because their parents were wrongly put in prison because they were at the wrong place at the wrong time.
How many adoptees can relate to that shit?
Where is my freaking bottle?!?
ah! I've graduated to a glass!
Who serves retro-active favors?