Press Release: Local Non-Profit Group Seeking to End Racist Drug Laws, Town Hall Meeting Set to Discuss Federal Law Reform, Activists & Politicians
For Immediate Release: May 31, 2007
Contact: Rev. Kenneth Glasgow, E: [email protected], Tel: 334-685-7377
Local Non-Profit Group Seeking to End Racist Drug Laws Town Hall Meeting Set to Discuss Federal Law Reform, Activists & Politicians
Birmingham - On June 2, 2007, The Ordinary Peopleâs Society (TOPS) will co-sponsor a town hall meeting that will be hosted by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in Birmingham, Alabama on the need to repair the current discriminatory federal drug sentencing policy. The event is open to the press, and TOPS speakers will be available before and afterwards for interviews.
What: The Incarceration Nation â Town Hall Meeting on Crack vs. Powder Cocaine Sentencing Disparities
Speakers:
Congressman Artur Davis, (D - Birmingham)
Senator Jeff Sessions (R - AL) (invited)
Rev. Kenneth Glasgow, Executive Director of TOPS
Ed Vaughan, President, Alabama State Conference NAACP
Dr. Foster Cook, Director, UAB - Treatment Alternatives for Safer Communities
Deborah Vagins, Policy Council for Civil Rights, ACLU Washington Legislative Office
Barry Hargrove, Field Organizer, ACLU Washington Legislative Office
When: 9:00am - 1:00pm Saturday, June 2
Where: Church of the Reconciler - 112 14th Street, North - Birmingham, AL
Currently, distributing just five grams of crack carries a minimum five-year federal prison sentence, while distributing 500 grams of powder cocaine carries the same sentence. Despite repeated recommendations by the U.S. Sentencing Commission, Congress has not addressed this 100:1 sentencing disparity, which has devastated African-American communities and undermined faith in the criminal justice system. African-Americans comprise the vast majority of those convicted of crack cocaine offenses, although whites and Hispanics form the majority of crack users.
âThese laws highlight the indecent and subconscious racist tactics still supported in the criminal justice system,â said Kenneth Glasgow, Executive Director of The Ordinary Peopleâs Society. âFive grams of crack cocaine sets forth a mandatory minimum of five years in prison, yet five-hundred grams of powder cocaineâ
A 2006 ACLU report found no medical or legal justification for the unfair sentencing disparity ratio. Although Congress' stated intent was to target high-level cocaine traffickers, the result has been just the opposite - a 2002 USSC report found that only 15 percent of federal cocaine traffickers can be classified as high-level, while over 70 percent of crack defendants have low-level involvement in drug activity, such as street level dealers, couriers, or lookouts.
T.O.P.S. is a nonprofit, faith-based organization that offers hope, without regard to race sex, creed, color or social status, to individuals and their families who suffer the effects of drug addiction, incarceration, homelessness, unemployment, hunger and illness, through comprehensive faith-based programs that provide a continuum of unconditional acceptance and care.
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T.O.P.S. (The Ordinary People Society) are a nonprofit organization that will provide an alternative to criminal behavior. This is a faith-based organization that will bridge the gap between the have and have-nots. We will provide rehabilitation to the repeat offenders while creating a program that target the youths before they reach the Criminal Justice System. Since the War on Drugs has been established the prison populations have continued to increase costing taxpayers more than $20,000 per inmate. This method is draining many State Governments. Also, families are suffering due to the lost of a mother, father, sister or brother. With our counseling and street ministry we are providing a second chance for many of our citizens both drug users and drug pushers. We would like to extend our program to include an after school program for youths and also for some adults so they can take pride and improve their self-esteem while improving their own family's life. T.O.P.S. provides counseling services to Ramsey Youth Services, Houston County Jail, and Dothan City Jail. T.O.P.S. would like to include a transitional facility that will provide a structural environment that will include education, treatment, and rehabilitation.
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