A life, for the drug war

FUCK THE POLICE

911 EVERY DAY
Murderers in most nations don't get sentenced this harshly. The drug war is way out of control.




http://www.truthout.org/article/set-steel-prison-life-without-parole

Set in Steel: Prison Life Without Parole


For federal prisoners, the prospect of early release expired in 1987. As prisons bulge and recidivism persists, why is the parole ban still in place?

In 1982, when George Martorano pled guilty to charges of marijuana possession and drug conspiracy, he was expecting ten years in prison, at most.

Today, after 24 years, Martorano holds the honor of longest-serving nonviolent first-time offender in the history of the United States. He's all too ready to forfeit that mark of distinction, but if his sentence plays out as issued, he'll be looking at several decades more: Martorano is serving a life sentence for three years of transporting and selling marijuana. Despite his spotless prison record - not to mention his suicide-prevention volunteer work, his yoga practice and the 20 books he's written while incarcerated - he has no hope of being released.

Martorano is just one of almost 200,000 inmates in federal prison, many of whom have no chance for early release, thanks to the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, which abolished parole at the federal level. The toughening of prison legislation over the past 20 years has also meant longer sentences for nonviolent offenders, combining with the parole ban to prompt a sharp increase in the federal prison population. As it stands, the beefed-up federal prison system costs taxpayers $40,000 per year for every inmate, and it costs inmates whole decades of their lives.

"We're being warehoused," Martorano said in a phone interview. "It's taken a million dollars just to keep me in."

Since the parole ban took effect, the federal prison population has more than quadrupled, according to Bureau of Justice statistics.

In the past few years, the sentencing system has been slowly changing in other ways. For example, the US Sentencing Commission recently shortened its recommended sentences for crack cocaine offenses, and Congress has shown signs that it will consider bills addressing the disparity between penalties for crack and powder cocaine. The Supreme Court is deliberating whether judges should be able to grant sentences that dip below established guidelines for sentence lengths.

However, Congress has taken no steps toward reversing course on federal parole. Although a bill to revive parole for federal prisoners has been introduced repeatedly in the House over the past few years, it has never made it to the floor for a vote. And an official at the US Sentencing Commission, who asked not to be identified, said he was not aware of any impetus that would bring back parole anytime soon.

As the prison population continues to explode, many influential voices in Congress and the public sphere are still touting a hardline philosophy when it comes to criminal justice, according to Representative Danny Davis (D-Illinois), who has sponsored the federal parole reinstatement bill for the last two Congresses.

"People don't want to be characterized as being 'soft on crime,'" Davis said in an interview. "They are still afraid that characterization will follow them. You would think that a country that is supposed to be as progressive as ours would've recognized that this approach is not working."



More at link...
 
These mandatory sentences for drug offenses have created a nightmare for the prisons and accomplished nothing positive.

Its time we used the prison system for violent offenders, not for someone who smokes, or even sells, marijuana.

It is a tragedy. But its one that is unlikely to be fixed. Any politician who tries will be branded soft on crime.
 
LOL

Truthout is more like bend the truth.

In 1982, when George Martorano pled guilty to charges of marijuana possession and drug conspiracy, he was expecting ten years in prison, at most.

Sounds like someone who got caught with a few ounces of weed


What really happened ...

Martorano pled guilty to charges that he had been a wholesale distributor of large amounts of cocaine, methamphetamine, methaqualone, and marijuana. The indictment also alleged that Martorano had conspired to purchase large amounts of heroin for distribution in the Philadelphia area. According to the indictment, the drugs sold yearly by Martorano's organization were worth millions of dollars. The indictment further charged that Martorano had supervised a number of other people in the drug enterprise. Martorano was alleged to have made a substantial income through this drug network and to have invested his profits in legitimate businesses.


http://cases.justia.com/us-court-of-appeals/F2/866/62/
 
Invested his profits in legitimate business. Sound like he was helping the economy and providing jobs.
 
These mandatory sentences for drug offenses have created a nightmare for the prisons and accomplished nothing positive.

Its time we used the prison system for violent offenders, not for someone who smokes, or even sells, marijuana.

It is a tragedy. But its one that is unlikely to be fixed. Any politician who tries will be branded soft on crime.

America is the greatest prison nation the world has ever seen .. but that is not by accident or unfortunate occurances of well-meaning policies. We are the greatest prison nation by design and democrats participated in the design ..and it's greatest executioner is Bill Clinton.

For the prison/industrial complex and all its downstream parasites who profit from the multi-billion dollar product of Crime, the "war on drugs" has been a godsend.

That clause in the 13th Amendment that declares slavery still legal in the US, prison is where it's practiced.

Seriously.

It's our "immigrant workforce."

It appears we can seem to operate this thing called "capitalism" without an immigrant workforce.
 
LOL

Truthout is more like bend the truth.

In 1982, when George Martorano pled guilty to charges of marijuana possession and drug conspiracy, he was expecting ten years in prison, at most.

Sounds like someone who got caught with a few ounces of weed


What really happened ...

Martorano pled guilty to charges that he had been a wholesale distributor of large amounts of cocaine, methamphetamine, methaqualone, and marijuana. The indictment also alleged that Martorano had conspired to purchase large amounts of heroin for distribution in the Philadelphia area. According to the indictment, the drugs sold yearly by Martorano's organization were worth millions of dollars. The indictment further charged that Martorano had supervised a number of other people in the drug enterprise. Martorano was alleged to have made a substantial income through this drug network and to have invested his profits in legitimate businesses.


http://cases.justia.com/us-court-of-appeals/F2/866/62/

"Been" and "Conspired" don't usually warrant life sentences .. and this guy's story pales in comparison to that of many hard-core dealers who've recieved far less sentences.

The truth of the drug war and all its failures is the real issue.
 
if a drug company submitted pot in a pill form for pain relieve, nausia prevention and glaucoma the could get it sold as a perscrition drug assuming the refeer madness racist mother fuckers that made it illeagal in the 30''s hadn't done so.
 
LOL

Truthout is more like bend the truth.

In 1982, when George Martorano pled guilty to charges of marijuana possession and drug conspiracy, he was expecting ten years in prison, at most.

Sounds like someone who got caught with a few ounces of weed


What really happened ...

Martorano pled guilty to charges that he had been a wholesale distributor of large amounts of cocaine, methamphetamine, methaqualone, and marijuana. The indictment also alleged that Martorano had conspired to purchase large amounts of heroin for distribution in the Philadelphia area. According to the indictment, the drugs sold yearly by Martorano's organization were worth millions of dollars. The indictment further charged that Martorano had supervised a number of other people in the drug enterprise. Martorano was alleged to have made a substantial income through this drug network and to have invested his profits in legitimate businesses.


http://cases.justia.com/us-court-of-appeals/F2/866/62/

That's still not worth a life sentence.
 
These mandatory sentences for drug offenses have created a nightmare for the prisons and accomplished nothing positive.

Its time we used the prison system for violent offenders, not for someone who smokes, or even sells, marijuana.

It is a tragedy. But its one that is unlikely to be fixed. Any politician who tries will be branded soft on crime.

You know, the average rapist in America serves five years in prison? Why can't they ever concentrate on that shit?
 
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Just like the decriminalization of alcohol. It worked and took alcohol out of the hands of organized crime.
 
After it made Joe Kennedy Sr. enough cash to buy the votes that gave us the Philanderer King of Camelot.
It also made the Five Families extemely wealthy. Criminalization of alcohol created the Modern American Mob. It was a stupid idea just as criminalization of drugs was a stupid idea.
 
Well, it demonstrates how different America was by 1901 from 1801, thanks to the twin sins of populism and progressivism (prohibition was one of progressivism's pet projects and amendments)...
 
Well, it demonstrates how different America was by 1901 from 1801, thanks to the twin sins of populism and progressivism (prohibition was one of progressivism's pet projects and amendments)...

Progressivism brought some much needed improvements, but prohibition was it at its excess.
 
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