[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 95 (Wednesday, June 29, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4209-S4210]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FAIR SENTENCING ACT GUIDELINE AMENDMENT
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, the bipartisan United States Sentencing
Commission was created by Congress to establish guidelines that are
used by Federal judges when they sentence criminal defendants.
Tomorrow, the Sentencing Commission will take an important vote. The
Commission is considering whether to apply retroactively the sentencing
guideline amendment implementing the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010. As
the lead sponsor of the Fair Sentencing Act, I urge the Commission to
apply this amendment retroactively.
Just last year, Democrats and Republicans joined together to pass the
Fair Sentencing Act, bipartisan legislation that reduced the disparity
between crack and powder cocaine sentencing.
For more than 20 years, we had a 100-to-1 crack-powder sentencing
disparity. It took 100 times more powder cocaine than crack cocaine to
trigger the same harsh mandatory minimum sentences. Simply possessing 5
grams of crack carried the same penalty as selling 500 grams of powder.
This disparity was one of the most significant causes of unequal
incarceration rates between African Americans and Caucasians. The
following statistic
[[Page S4210]]
is chilling: In this country, African Americans are incarcerated at
approximately six times the rate of Caucasians.
The Fair Sentencing Act dramatically reduced the 100-to-1 disparity.
Last November, the Sentencing Commission issued amended sentencing
guidelines that put into effect the Fair Sentencing Act's reduced crack
sentences. These guidelines will be used by Federal judges across the
country in every drug sentencing.
The Commission is now deciding whether to apply these more equitable
guidelines retroactively to those who have already been sentenced and
are in prison. I sent a letter, joined by Judiciary Committee Chairman
Patrick Leahy, and Senators Franken and Coons, urging the Commission to
vote for retroactivity.
Let's be clear about the bottom line: If the Commission does not make
its amendment retroactive, thousands of people will continue to serve
prison sentences that Congress has determined are unfair and
disproportionately punitive to African Americans. Thousands of
individuals sentenced before November of last year would remain subject
to our old, racially disparate sentencing scheme. Yet those who
happened to be sentenced on or after November 1 could receive
significantly reduced prison terms--even if they engaged in exactly the
same conduct.
This is inconsistent with the goals of the Fair Sentencing Act--
reducing disparities in drug sentencing, increasing trust in the
justice system, and focusing limited resources on serious offenders. In
effect, it would say: ``The U.S. government is OK with you continuing
to serve a sentence we've acknowledged is unfair--and most unfair to
those with your color of skin.''
Now, opponents of retroactivity have made all sorts of arguments in
an effort to muddy the water and push their own conservative sentencing
agenda. They have suggested that because the Fair Sentencing Act did
not explicitly address retroactivity, the sentencing guidelines
shouldn't be retroactive. This is an obvious attempt to confuse apples
and oranges.
To be clear: We are not talking about whether the statute itself--the
Fair Sentencing Act--should be applied retroactively. That is a
different question for a different day--and one that affects many more
issues and many more inmates. We are talking about the Sentencing
Commission exercising its own independent, expert authority to make its
own guideline amendments retroactive.
Opponents of retroactivity also claim that the Sentencing Commission
is overstepping its bounds by considering retroactivity. But this is
the standard administrative process, and one that Congress designed to
be left to the Sentencing Commission. The Commission has routinely
applied its amendments retroactively--many, many times before. And it
has voted for retroactivity virtually every time it has amended the
guidelines to reduce drug sentences. In fact, Congress expressly gave
the Commission the authority to make amendments to the sentencing
guidelines apply retroactively.
Retroactivity makes practical and economic sense. Our Federal prison
system is 37 percent over capacity. Inmates are being double and even
triple bunked. Applying the Fair Sentencing Act guideline amendment
retroactively could reduce prison overcrowding dramatically and result
in up to $1 billion in savings for taxpayers. Approximately 12,000
individuals--who are prescreened by judges--would be eligible for an
average sentence reduction of 37 months. The average cost to house a
Federal prisoner is $28,284 per year. Taxpayer savings would be about
$87,000 for each inmate.
History also tells us retroactivity makes sense. In 2007, the
Commission made retroactive a similar amendment to reduce crack
sentences. Thousands more defendants were eligible then for reductions
than would be eligible now. Yet motions for reduced sentences were
handled smoothly.
The Department of Justice supports guideline retroactivity and the
Bureau of Prisons has implemented a plan to carry out the logistics.
The Criminal Law Committee of the Judicial Conference of the United
States, comprised of judges from every Federal circuit, unequivocally
supports retroactivity.
Opponents simply ignore the history and have used scare tactics to
raise misleading questions of public safety. Retroactivity does not
automatically entitle a defendant to a sentence reduction. A Federal
judge would have discretion to decide in every single case whether a
reduction is appropriate. If it is not--because of the facts of a case
or concerns about an individual defendant--no reduction will be given.
Period. All judges are actually required to consider public safety when
making a decision. Moreover, on the back end, the Bureau of Prisons has
said that it ``is prepared to take measures to ensure that offenders
released due to retroactive application . . . are transitioned
effectively back into the community.''
In short the Sentencing Commission should use the expert discretion
Congress granted it to apply its amendment retroactively to each
defendant subject to a sentencing scheme Congress determined was
unjust. I hope the Commission does the right thing and applies
retroactively the sentencing guideline amendment implementing the Fair
Sentencing Act.
Retroactivity would bolster respect for our justice system, help
correct the unfairness of a racially disparate sentencing scheme, and
save resources for taxpayers while heeding concerns of public safety.
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