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Projects and Initiatives
Break the Chains is committed to working with other organizations,
community and religious leaders, educators, elected officials, criminal
justice professionals, treatment providers, formerly incarcerated
persons and their families and those who are concerned about racial
and social justice to promote drug policies that are fair, just
and effective. Below is a description of some of our projects and
initiatives:
Equalization of Federal Cocaine Sentences
Break the Chains is actively involved in the campaign to equalize
federal sentences for cocaine offenses. The disparity in sentencing
for federal crack vs powder cocaine offenses has been a major reason
for the dramatic increase in the federal prison population and the
over representation of African American men. Break the Chains is
urging all those who care about this injustice to sign on to a letter
urging federal policymakers to change this law.
Sign-on Sheet, Equalization
Letter, 10 Point Document
Twenty years ago Congress enacted mandatory minimum sentences for
drug offenses. Among other things, the sentencing scheme singled
out crack cocaine offenses for especially harsh punishment, establishing
a five year mandatory sentence for simple possession of five grams
of crack cocaine and a 100:1 ratio in the threshold
amounts triggering mandatory sentences for crack cocaine vs powder
cocaine offense. A person convicted of selling 5 grams of crack
cocaine receives a minimum sentence of five years- it takes 500
grams of powder cocaine to trigger the same mandatory sentence.
The impact of these sentences has fallen disproportionately on African-Americans
convicted of low level drug offenses. Between 1995 and 2000 the
percentage of federal crack cocaine convictions of street-level
dealers rose from almost half (48.4%) to more than two thirds (66.5%)
and in 2005 more than 82% of federal
crack cocaine defendants were African-American. The
United States Sentencing Commission has repeatedly called on Congress
to eliminate the federal cocaine sentencing disparity and the mandatory
minimum for simple possession of crack cocaine.
The time is ripe to mobilize leaders
and advocates in affected communities to advocate for meaningful
reform of this law which has exacerbated racial disparities in sentencing
and incarceration for low level drug offenses, particularly of African-American
defendants. We request that you join us in moving this issue to
the forefront of the agenda for achieving significant drug policy
reform during the coming federal legislative session.
Substance Abuse and Women
In 2005 we collaborated with the Brennan Center for Justice and
the Women’s Rights Division of the ACLU to produce a major
report on the impact of drug policies on women and their families,
the report entitled: Caught in the Net: The Impact of Drug Policies
on Women and Families.
(Fair Laws 4 Families)
The report was released in conjunction with a conference held
at New York University Law School that brought together activists,
formerly incarcerated women, judges, lawyers, treatment providers
and other criminal justice professionals to examine the role drug
laws and sentencing policies play in the increasing incarceration
rate of women and propose alternatives that are both humane and
effective.
Disproportionate Law Enforcement Targeting
Youth of Color
Over the past year, Break the Chains has collaborated with Harry
G. Levine, a sociology professor at Queens College on a project
examining the reasons for and impact of the disproportionately high
numbers of marijuana possession arrests in New York City. Over the
past decade members of the New York City Police Department (NYPD)
have made more arrests of people for possessing small amounts of
marijuana than police in any other city in the United States. These
arrests have fallen disproportionately on youth of color, especially
Black and Latino youth living in the poorest communities. On average
NYPD officers have arrested about 100
Whites, 200 Latinos, and 400
Blacks every week for the last ten years Break the Chains
plans to release a report summarizing our findings and recommendations
soon.
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