Tag: mandatory minimum sentences

  • Incarcerated Drug Offenders Freed By First Step Act

    Incarcerated Drug Offenders Freed By First Step Act

    The 14 Rhode Island inmates are among an estimated 2,600 federal prisoners who may be eligible for early release under the First Step Act.

    Fourteen inmates in the Rhode Island prison system have gained early release under the First Step Act, The Providence Journal reports.

    The federal law, passed in December 2018, provides sentencing relief to individuals convicted of crack cocaine-related charges before 2010 as a means of addressing what the Journal called “widespread acknowledgment of unfair lengthy mandatory crack-cocaine sentencing polices,” which sent numerous individuals—mainly people of color—to prison, many of which under life sentences.

    The 14 Rhode Island inmates are among an estimated 2,600 federal prisoners who may be eligible for early release under the First Step Act.

    As Vox noted, the First Step Act makes retroactive the reforms set in place by the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010, which reduced a disparity between sentencing for crack and powder cocaine sentencing handed down after the law’s passage.

    The law also expands the margins by which judges can avoid imposing mandatory minimum sentences and revises the “three strikes” rule so that individuals with three or more convictions, including those for drug offenses, automatically receive a 25-year sentence instead of life.

    And it increases both the number of “good time credits”—which grants prisoners the opportunity to gain early release for good behavior—from 47 days to 54 days, while also allowing them to get “earned time credits” for participating in job and rehabilitation programs.

    The Journal cited the case of one of the inmates, Joel Francisco, a former gang member who was sentenced to life in prison for crack cocaine trafficking in 2005. Having been twice convicted for felony drug crimes prior to his sentencing, Francisco was handed down a mandatory life sentence under then-current drug laws.

    “The judge at his original sentencing was forced to impose a life sentence, despite finding that a 15-year sentence was appropriate,” said public defender Olin Thompson. 

    Ten days after President Trump signed the First Step Act into law on December 21, 2018, Francisco wrote to the court to request an early release under the law’s guidelines.

    In his request, he cited having accepted responsibility for his actions, and noted the measures he’s taken to establish a life outside of his criminal past, including the 20-plus programs he’s completed during his 14 years in prison, including personal growth and conflict management.

    On February 5th, Judge John J. McConnell approved an agreement between Thompson and federal prosecutors, which allowed Francisco to leave prison on time served that same day.

    News of his release received a wary response from police. The Journal quoted Commander Thomas Verdi, who had worked Francisco’s case for years before his incarceration. “He had a propensity for violence. His nickname is Joe Crack, and [his gang] ran their operation through the use of violence.”

    But Thompson was quick to point out that Francisco’s track record behind bars, as well his time already served, qualified him for the early release. “Even after this reduction, he still ended up serving nearly 15 years for his non-violent drug offenses. The First Step Act merely extended to him and many others the benefit of reforms to our drug laws to make them fairer, more sensible and less racially disparate.”

    Chief U.S. Probation Officer John G. Marshall voiced optimism for the future of individuals like Francisco.

    “You’re looking at life in prison and you get your life back,” he said. “That’s a pretty big swing. Hopefully, everybody is going to be successful.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Feds Will Prosecute Fentanyl Dealers More Harshly in Baltimore

    Feds Will Prosecute Fentanyl Dealers More Harshly in Baltimore

    The feds are set to crackdown on fentanyl sellers in Baltimore, where there is expected to be twice as many overdose deaths as homicides in 2018.

    As part of the Trump Administration’s tough-on-crime stance, federal prosecutors will begin trying more fentanyl cases in federal court. They will be utilizing stronger resources and mandatory minimum sentences in an attempt to deter people from selling the deadly synthetic opioids in Baltimore, where there are expected to be twice as many overdose deaths as homicides this year. 

    Writing in an op-ed for The Baltimore Sun, US Attorney for Maryland Robert K. Hur said that the tougher tactics will hopefully curb fentanyl sales. As of last week, all fentanyl arrests in Baltimore are being reviewed by federal prosecutors who will decide whether the case will proceed in the state or federal system. This is part of the federal Synthetic Opioid Surge (SOS) initiative.

    “Federal prosecutors will pursue more cases involving fentanyl, bringing federal resources, laws and prison sentences to bear on those dealers who pose the greatest threat to public safety,” Hur wrote. “Word should spread that if you sell fentanyl on the streets, you run a very real risk of federal time.”

    Federal drug charges carry mandatory minimum sentences. Someone convicted of distributing 400 grams of fentanyl will face 10 years in prison; 40 grams will carry a five-year sentence. If the fentanyl is found to be involved in a death, there is a 20-year sentence. Because federal sentences are served in prisons far from home and have no possibility or parole or suspension, they’re seen as more harsh than state sentences. 

    “But criminal enforcement is essential to ending this crisis,” Hur wrote. “We need to target street dealers as well as corrupt pharmacists and medical providers. Treatment and prevention alone won’t stop the sellers, who are driven by profit and greed.”

    Hur shared the story of a 35-year-old woman who died of a fentanyl overdose. Before her death she texted a friend, “I don’t want to [be] this way. I worked and fought too hard to throw it all away. I almost overdose[d] the other night. I don’t know what to do.”

    “Law enforcement organizations know what to do in order to prevent more of these tragedies, and we are resolved to do it,” Hur wrote. 

    Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions first announced the SOS initiative in June, starting the program in 10 districts that were hard-hit by the opioid epidemic. 

    “We at the Department of Justice are going to dismantle these deadly fentanyl distribution networks. Simply put, we will be tireless until we reduce the number of overdose deaths in this country. We are going to focus on some of the worst counties for opioid overdose deaths in the United States, working all cases until we have disrupted the supply of these deadly drugs,” Sessions said in a press release at the time.

    View the original article at thefix.com