[Washington Times] The Obama administration is moving toward reducing the criminal penalties for nonviolent drug offenders serving long prison terms to help blunt the rising costs of federal imprisonment and tame the growing racial disparities within the prison population. The decriminalization of wrong-doing, a long held administration goal.
The move may allow thousands of offenders, currently serving jail time, to apply to get out of prison early, although its unclear specifically which offenders would apply and how many applications would be granted. How many additional ACA Navigators are needed ?
The decision to commute sentences of nonviolent drug offenders is only the first step in helping to reduce the nations growing prison population, said James Cole, deputy attorney general at the Department of Justice, in a speech he gave Thursday in New York. The problem of a disproportionate number of incarcerated Amish must be addressed.
#5
..and tame the growing racial disparities within the prison population.
Don't do the crime, don't do the time. Once again, addressing the symptoms, not the underlying social pathology that created and sustains the behavior.
#10
I'm OK with this. There isn't enough room for the hard-core types already, and the prisons are already letting them out early due to over crowding. And some of these that they're referring to might be those arrested for crack and doing more time than posession of regular powdwer cocaine.
#11
So are they going to let the white and brown crack users free? How about the white and brown cocaine users they compare against. Or is this just a racist president promoting racist policies?
Posted by: 49 Pan ||
02/01/2014 12:42 Comments ||
Top||
#12
Tex- I seriously doubt their definition of nonviolent has much, if anything, to with the violence of the crime and everything to do with the race of the prep. This is Eric 'we will not prosecute my people' holder and his boss.
#13
A lot of the "non-violent" types are probably pleaded down from violent crimes because the prosecution had difficulty getting eye-witness testimony, and the defense worried about the possibility of new evidence or testimony showing up. So they made a deal. What I'd love to have passed into law is every government official has to house the worst parolees in his home for 5 years, as a kind of halfway house - reform via osmosis, as it were.
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Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
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Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
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Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.