November Coalition Web Logs (Blogs)
A weblog, a blog written by Nora Callahan, executive director of the November Coalition.

Working to end drug war injustice, the November Coalition was founded in 1997. Please join us.

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Received Fri, 2 May 2008 09:14:06 -0700 from Tom Murlowski <tom [at] november [dot] org>

Nora's Blog has moved!

Visit Nora's new blog at http://www.november.org/nora

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Received Wed, 12 Dec 2007 08:38:44 -0800 from Nora Callahan <nora [at] november [dot] org>

Bottoms Up and Over the Wire

Bottoms Up and Over the Wire December 10, 2007

One of the New Year's Resolutions for November's Staff is to get some RSS feeds of favorite blogs and bloggers, and link up other projects so our discussions here have more merit, and are up to speed. If you are techie in brain, and a volunteer at heart I'm open to assistance.

Today we uploaded a first broadcast of Bottom's Up and Over the Wire . Episodes will reside at our website at www.november.org/podcast and at iTunes and other popular public areas for download. Aside from an internet connected audience, it's our intention programing become and maintain enough public interest that community radio broadcasters air the programming. If that were to happen, people imprisoned near community radio stations would keep better updated to changes in law, advocacy opportunities and feel less isolated.

Comments are welcome, in text or recorded for possible inclusion in an upcoming episode of Bottoms Up and Over the Wire.

Visit www.november.org/podcast .

Nora

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Received Thu, 14 Jun 2007 13:38:29 -0800 from Nora Callahan <nora [at] november [dot] org>

Comments on: Bush Seeks To Re-Impose Mandatory Minimums

Hello Friends:

(See article below.) Isn’t this news upsetting?

Senator Leahy obviously sees this as an attempt by the Republicans to overhaul our sentencing system in the wrong way. If he is correct, we are in a dangerous time.

Bush thinks (or the media reports) that Mandatory Minimums aren’t intact — that is stupid. They are intact. They probably do NOT understand that we have two rails of drug and other sentencing. We have Sentencing Guidelines, and Mandatory Minimums.

I’ve been studying the history of the ‘reform movement’ not so unlike the current sentencing reform movement, except that it was a movement identifiable in the 1970’s — the one that ‘reemerged in the 1980’s with FAMM , CURE National ’s work, and lots of other groups, and the drug law reform movement.

In the 1970’s the reform efforts were turned on it’s head and Zimbardo (of the Stanford Prison Experiment ) says it best (in 1998).

"And then, almost without warning, all of this critical reappraisal and constructive optimism about humane standards and alternatives to incarceration was replaced with something else. The counterrevolution in crime and punishment began slowly and imperceptibly at first and then pushed forward with a consistency of direction and effect that could not be overlooked. It moved so forcefully and seemingly inexorably during the 1980s that it resembled nothing so much as a runaway punishment train, driven by political steam and fueled by media-induced fears of crime."

I do not like the way this came out as soon as Bush knew he got to keep Alberto Gonzales as top cop.

Rule of law is at stake — and most people in this country have no idea how important it is. Without rule of law we cannot be a civil society. Raise your voices, the stakes are higher than ever. Write newspapers and your leaders, objecting to Bush’s insistence on growing the federal prison industrial complex like never before. Consider educating the people you know in ways that you haven’t done before.

To learn how to do this — visit our Home Page and follow links on volunteer opportunities: www.november.org

In Struggle,

Nora

PS: for more on these issues, I’ve explained the mess (and how we get out of it) at: http://narcosphere.narconews.com/story/2005/1/20/14944/3492

Here’s another if that doesn’t do it for you, it’s some of our founding principles - how we set about to explain the tangled problems of drug enforcement and our federal sentencing systems -- and written by my brother, G. Patrick wayyyy back in 1997: http://www.november.org/razorwire/rzold/04/0403.html
______________________________

June 13, 2007 - Associated Press (US)

Bush Seeks To Re-Impose Mandatory Minimums

Crime Bill Would Limit Judges’ Sentencing Power; Critics Call It "One Size Fits All Justice"

The Bush administration is trying to roll back a Supreme Court decision by pushing legislation that would require prison time for nearly all criminals.

The Justice Department is offering the plan as an opening salvo in a larger debate about whether sentences for crack cocaine are unfairly harsh and racially discriminatory.

Republicans are seizing the administration’s crackdown, packaged in legislation to combat violent crime, as a campaign issue for 2008.

In a speech June 1 to announce the bill, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales urged Congress to re-impose mandatory minimum prison sentences against federal convicts — and not let judges consider such penalties "merely a suggestion."

Such an overhaul, in part, "will strengthen our hand in fighting criminals who threaten the safety and security of all Americans," Gonzales said in the speech, delivered three days before the FBI announced a slight national uptick in violent crime during 2006.

Judges, however, were livid over the proposal to limit their power.

"This would require one-size-fits-all justice," said U.S. District Judge Paul G. Cassell, chairman of the Criminal Law committee of the Judicial Conference, the judicial branch’s policy-making body.

"The vast majority of the public would like the judges to make the individualized decisions needed to make these very difficult sentencing decisions," Cassell said. "Judges are the ones who look the defendants in the eyes. They hear from the victims. They hear from the prosecutors."

The debate, pitting prosecutors against jurists, has been ongoing since a 2005 Supreme Court ruling that declared the government’s two decades-old sentencing guidelines unconstitutional. The ruling in United States v. Booker said judges are not required to abide by the federal guidelines — which set mandatory minimum and maximums on sentences — but could consider them in meting out prison time.

The Justice Department wants to return to the old system of mandatory minimum sentences, under which judges could grant leniency only in special cases. Without those required floors, Justice officials maintain that different judges could hand out widely varying penalties for the same crime.

Justice officials also point to a growing number of lighter sentences as possible proof that crime is on the rise because criminals are no longer cowed by strict penalties.

In the two years since the ruling, federal judges have become three times more likely to hand down prison sentences below thesuggested levels, according to 2006 U.S. Sentencing Commission data. In 2005, before the Booker case, those penalties represented 4.3 percent of all sentences imposed. That number rose to 13 percent after the Supreme Court ruling and dipped to 12.1 percent in 2006, the data show.

Still, Justice officials privately concede that returning to the sentencing guidelines as required minimums is a long-shot at best. At the least, they say, their proposal marks a first step toward ratcheting back a counter-push by courts to lower penalties for first-time crack cocaine convictions.

This week, the Supreme Court waded into the racially sensitive dispute, agreeing to consider whether courts can give defendants similar sentences for crack cocaine crimes as for cocaine powder. Crack crimes usually garner much tougher penalties, and most crack cocaine offenders in federal courts are black.

"I don’t think they in a million years think it’s going to pass anytime soon," said Douglas Berman, an Ohio State University sentencing expert. "But they’ve gotten more extra mileage out of threatening this, framing the debate of sentencing reform."

"Of course this is politics," Berman said.

Republicans eager to embrace a tough-on-crime stance as the 2008 election year approaches are demanding that mandatory minimum penalties be put back in place.

"Without sentencing guidelines, we are back to unfair sentences and more violent crime," said Rep. Lamar Smith of Texas, top Republican on the House Judiciary Committee. "Congress has a responsibility to ensure tough penalties for violent offenders and restore the basic principle that all people are treated equally under the law."

Washington defense attorney Michael Horowitz, a U.S. Sentencing Commission member and a former criminal division official at the Justice Department, said the proposed overhaul will "have some appeal in an election year."

But Gonzales, dogged by scandals ranging from fired U.S. attorneys to FBI privacy intrusions, is unlikely to persuade an already skeptical Congress to adopt his plan.

"With all the issues in the Judiciary Committee right now, it’s going to be tough to get traction on this," Horowitz said.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., dismissed the plan as misguided. Without Leahy’s support, the Justice Department’s sentencing plan is unlikely to become law as long as Democrats control the Senate.

The Bush administration should be spending more money on local police to battle crime rather than proposing a "large-scale and premature overhaul of our sentencing system," Leahy said.

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Received Thu, 03 May 2007 22:04:13 -0800 from Nora Callahan <nora [at] november [dot] org>

85-year-old Mother Denied Prison Visit

Bea Callahan denied prison visit Video: Nora Callahan's mother, 85-year old Bea Callahan, denied prison visit with her son Gary because of "positive drug test" - from CW-TV 33, Dallas, TX, May 3, 2007

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Received Thu, 03 May 2007 15:26:08 -0800 from Nora Callahan <nora [at] november [dot] org>

Ion Drug Detectors And Prison Visitation

Message sent to US Bureau of Prisons Director Harley G. Lappin

Subject: Ion Drug Detectors And Prison Visitation

( You can send your own letter to Mr. Lappin here .)

May 3, 2007

Nora Callahan
282 West Astor
Colville, WA 99114-2418

Dear Mr. Lappin:

My 85 year old mother tested positive and was ejected from federal prison premises. The family stayed on, at great expense, in hopes today goes better.

I've researched this machines as much as I've been able, for many years and if they worked, they would probably be using these machines in broader applications. They aren't. Mostly prison visitation rooms -- drug detectors that is.

Policy that a secondary search can't be made seems to back up the suspicion that many have -- the machines don't work.

I realize that the machines might work in ideal conditions, but glove changing, filter changing and trained personnel are all qualifying conditions that have to be met, for the machine to work well.

Anecdotally, people that get false positives blame hand lotion, dry cleaning chemicals and handling money. Mostly, they probably don't work because the technology is new and not accurate, the operators are not following procedures, and people come into contact with particulates that test positive for illegal drugs.

Perhaps a moratorium on their use, and cease the terrible emotional and financial toll this machine and the policies take on people that try to visit their loved ones.

Sincerely, Nora Callahan

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