Attorney General Eric Holder gave a remarkable speech this week explaining how narcotics policy and sentencing cut to the core of the most important criminal justice issue of our time.
“As the so-called ‘war on drugs’ enters its fifth decade, we need to ask whether it, and the approaches that comprise it, have been truly effective,” he said. “With an outsized, unnecessarily large prison population, we need to ensure that incarceration is used to punish, deter, and rehabilitate—not merely to warehouse and forget.”
Holder also said, powerfully, that the disproportionately long sentences of black male offenders “isn’t just unacceptable—it is shameful.”
As Holder’s speech recognized, the Trayvon Martin case has focused President Obama on issues of race and crime. This administration clearly knows there is a problem to be solved within the federal system and the attorney general movingly described the shape and scope of the problem. Sadly though, the measures Holder announced to deal with that issue were striking in their lack of ambition or imagination. The speech did not even mention the presidential power crafted by the framers specifically for such injustices: Clemency.
There was funding for law enforcement and support for proposed legislation that has little chance to get through a Congress that can’t even deal with the sequester. Then Holder made three significant policy announcements relating to over-incarceration. In the first, he required United States attorneys to develop local guidelines for what cases should be accepted for prosecution. This is no great revelation—most offices already have such guidelines. The second change related to allowing a relatively small number of elderly inmates to receive compassionate release.
The third policy directive, which has received the most attention, changed the Justice Department’s charging policies so that some low-level defendants will be less likely to face mandatory minimum sentences in narcotics cases. While this is significant and good, it probably will not affect as many cases as some reformers hope. It still gives a lot of leeway to prosecutors and disparities will continue to exist based on their differing attitudes. More importantly, a large number of these low-level cases are subject to a statutory “safety valve” which already gives prosecutors the ability to evade mandatory minimums.
These remedies address only a thimbleful out of the ocean of tragedy that misguided drug policies have created.
Hopefully, further initiatives will be announced. The first, and most obvious, would be a vigorous use of the clemency power to free those who continue to serve long federal sentences under sentencing schemes the nation has abandoned. Through Holder’s speech, the administration took credit for 2010’s Fair Sentencing Act, which reduced threshold amounts for mandatory sentences in crack cocaine cases.
Before that legislation, the thresholds were triggered by (at the lowest level) 500 grams of powder cocaine or just five grams of crack. This 100-to-1 ratio resulted in nonsensical, lengthy sentences that were reserved almost exclusively for African-American defendants. In the end, all three branches of government rejected the 100-to-1 scheme.









