NY Drug Laws: In New Data, a Redefinition of Drug Felon
Thursday, January 6, 2005 at 03:09PM
TheSpook
- Although Impetus of Drug law change was to reduce number Blacks locked up only 1/3 are impacted
New data from New York's Department of Correctional Services are
providing a clearer - and in some ways surprising - picture of the
population of long-term inmates eligible to be released or to have
their sentences reduced under changes to state drug laws that Gov.
George E. Pataki signed into law last week. The inmates are the roughly
440 so-called A-1 felons, sentenced to at least 15 years to life in
prison under the Rockefeller drug laws for possessing or selling
narcotics. The new data suggest that these prisoners are in some ways
very different from the general prison population, and even from
lower-level drug offenders. Although experts disagree about why this is
and what it means, they agree that the new numbers provide a first real
snapshot of those affected by the changes in the Rockefeller laws,
which were instituted in the 1973 and put first-time offenders behind
bars based merely on the amount of drugs they were caught with. Critics
have called the laws unduly harsh and said they unduly penalized young
African-American men, and women who were involved with someone in the
drug trade. But according to the new data, almost half of the A-1
felons were born outside the United States, coming from about 20
different countries. The largest group by far after native New Yorkers,
which account for more than a quarter of the A-1's, is from the
Dominican Republic.[more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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