FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: February 24, 2009
CONTACT: Jennifer Carnig at 212.607.3363 or [email protected]
NYCLU to City Council: Rockefeller Drug Laws Cause Racial Disparities, Huge Taxpayer Burden
February 24, 2009 â At a hearing today before the City Council, the New York Civil Liberties Union presented testimony illustrating the stark racial disparities and enormous financial burden generated by the Rockefeller Drug Laws in New York City.
Socheatta Meng, the NYCLUâs legislative counsel, testified before the Councilâs Committee on Mental Health, Mental Retardation, Alcoholism, Drug Abuse and Disability Services.
âBy mandating harsh prison sentences based primarily upon the amount of drugs involved, this stateâs drug-sentencing scheme has proven itself to be draconian, irrational, unfair and racially discriminatory,â Meng said.
The NYCLU called on the City Council to urge New York Stateâs political leaders to significantly reform the drug sentencing laws.
âThis is a new political moment,â said NYCLU Executive Director Donna Lieberman, who did not testify. âGovernor Paterson, as well as key legislative leaders in Albany, have publicly pledged their commitment to reform. A fiscal crisis requires strict cost-cutting. The time is ripe for us to demand real changes to our stateâs drug sentencing laws.â
Enacted in 1973, the Rockefeller Drug Laws mandate extremely harsh prison terms for the possession or sale of relatively small amounts of drugs. Supposedly intended to target drug kingpins, most of the people incarcerated under these laws are convicted of low-level, nonviolent offenses, and many of them have no prior criminal record.
Despite modest reforms in 2004 and 2005, the Rockefeller Drug Laws continue to deny people serving under harsh sentences the ability to apply for shorter terms, and restrict the power of judges to place addicts into treatment programs.
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