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WHAT'S HAPPENING?
H.R. 1528, the new version of "Defending America's
Most Vulnerable: Safe Access to Drug Treatment and Child Protection
Act of 2004," by Rep. James Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.),
was passed by the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism
and Homeland Security on April 12 and FAMM expects the full House
Judiciary Committee to vote on it as early as next week (April
18 - 22, 2005). If this bill becomes law, it will have a disastrous
effect on the federal sentencing system. We must act now to stop
H.R. 1528.
GET READY TO ACT!
If you live in a House Judiciary Committee member's district
please take action now by contacting your lawmaker. Click the
link above. It may ask you to enter your address to make sure
you live in a House Judiciary Committee member's district. PLEASE
NOTE: If you do not live in one of the House Judiciary committee
member's districts, you will see a message that says "Office
is currently vacant." This means your federal representative
is not on the committee.
If you do not live in these districts, FAMM still needs your
help in the coming days to fight this terrible sentencing bill.
FAMM will send an "ACT NOW" e-mail when the time is
right to contact other representatives. Why wait? Because the
bill has not yet reached most members of the House of Representatives;
if you contact them now about it, they won't know what you are
talking about. But as early as next week, the bill could be headed
for a full House vote. Use this time to get ready to act!
WHAT'S WRONG WITH H.R. 1528?
Among other things, it:
- Makes the federal sentencing guidelines a system of mandatory
minimum sentences through a "Booker-fix" provision.
Creates new mandatory minimums that further erode judicial discretion.
Eliminates the safety valve for low-level drug offenders.
Makes virtually every drug crime committed in urban areas subject
to "drug free zone" penalties that carries a five-year
mandatory minimum sentence.
Punishes defendants for the "relevant conduct" of co-conspirators
that occurred BEFORE the defendant joined the conspiracy.
As written, H.R. 1528 would:
- Effectively make the federal sentencing guidelines a system
of mandatory minimum sentences through a "Booker-fix"
provision. This provision forbids judges from departing below
the guideline sentence in all but a few cases.
- Make the sale of any quantity of any controlled substance
(including anything greater than five grams of marijuana) by
a person older than 21 to a person younger than 18 subject to
a ten-year federal mandatory minimum sentence.
- Create a new three-year mandatory minimum for parents who
witness or learn about drug trafficking activities, targeting
or even near their children, if they do not report it to law
enforcement authorities within 24 hours and do not provide full
assistance investigating, apprehending, and prosecuting the offender.
- Create a new 10-year mandatory minimum sentence for any parent
committing a drug trafficking crime in or near the presence of
their minor child.
- Mandate life in prison for persons 21 years or older convicted
a second time of distributing drugs to a person under 18 or convicted
a first time after a felony drug conviction has become final.
- Increase to five years the federal mandatory minimum sentence
for the sale of a controlled substance within 1,000 feet of a
school, college, public library, drug treatment facility (or
any place where drug treatment, including classes, are held),
or private or public daycare facilities - in short, almost anywhere
in cities across the U.S.
- Eliminate the federal "safety valve," granting
it only when the government certifies that the defendant pled
guilty to the most serious readily provable offense (the one
that carries the longest sentence), and has "done everything
possible to assist substantially in the investigation and prosecution
of another person," and would prohibit the federal "safety-valve"
in cases where drugs were distributed or possessed near a person
under 18, where the defendant delayed his or her efforts to provide
substantial assistance to the government, or provided false,
misleading or incomplete information.
FAMM OPPOSES H.R. 1528
For these reasons, FAMM opposes H.R. 1528. We need FAMM members
to ACT NOW to stop this harmful bill. Rep. Sensenbrenner is the
chair of the House Judiciary Committee and therefore controls
its agenda. It is imperative that FAMM members who live in the
House Judiciary Committee member's districts call, write and
meet with your federal representatives as soon as possible.
Please forward this message to your friends and neighbors
who have e-mail. Print and distribute copies of this alert to
those who don't. For more information, visit www.famm.org.
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