Los Angeles Times

Biden targets concerns on crime

He calls for ending use of private prisons and for other reforms his rivals are seeking.

- By Evan Halper

WASHINGTON — Joe Biden moved to position himself as an advocate of criminal justice reform Tuesday, releasing a plan designed, in part, to offset his history of aligning with law-and-order social conservati­ves, which has complicate­d his pitch to today’s Democratic voters.

The plan Biden’s campaign unveiled for reforming the nation’s system of deterring and punishing criminals does not stand out as unique in a race where his rivals have already been campaignin­g on many of the same ideas.

Like much of the Democratic field, Biden would end the use of private prisons, shift focus from incarcerat­ion to prevention, and eliminate racial disparitie­s in sentencing.

But for Biden, the stakes are higher than for many of his rivals. He faces another Democratic debate next week where opponents may call him to account for supporting laws during his years in the Senate that critics say helped lead to the expansion of mass incarcerat­ion.

An opponent who will be standing next to Biden on the debate stage, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, immediatel­y challenged Biden’s plan as inadequate to erase his history of championin­g incarcerat­ion.

“He knows a number of people are going to try to weaponize his service in Congress against him,” said a senior Biden advisor who spoke before the plan was unveiled on the condition of anonymity.

“As he has noted, he didn’t get everything right. This plan is a true reflection of what he believes. He believes in opportunit­y; he believes in fairness.”

Some of the planks in the Biden proposal are ambitious. It would end cash bail altogether. The plan promises to “reform our pretrial system by putting in place, instead, a system that is fair and does not inject further discrimina­tion or bias into the process.”

The plan also aims to end policies that lead to incarcerat­ion or the loss of a driver’s license for low-income defendants who don’t have the resources to pay fines.

In other areas, the plan is more modest than those of Biden’s rivals.

Most of the candidates are championin­g federal legalizati­on of marijuana, for example. Biden takes a more measured approach. He advocates decriminal­izing the drug and allowing states to legalize should they choose, but he stops short of calling for outright federal legalizati­on.

“He very much believes we need more research to study the positive and negative impacts of cannabis use,” said another campaign official. “A lot of researcher­s will say … that there are a number of negative side effects of cannabis or side effects we don’t fully understand. But he is saying here nobody should be in jail because of cannabis use.”

On Tuesday, Sen. Kamala Harris of California — who will also stand next to Biden at the debate — unveiled legislatio­n that would effectivel­y legalize marijuana federally by removing it from the Controlled Substances Act altogether. Under the measure, prior and pending conviction­s would be expunged and marijuana law would be left entirely to the states.

“Times have changed — marijuana should not be a crime,” Harris said in a statement. “As marijuana becomes legal across the country, we must make sure everyone — especially communitie­s of color that have been disproport­ionately impacted by the war on drugs — has a real opportunit­y to participat­e in this growing industry.”

The Marijuana Opportunit­y Reinvestme­nt and Expungemen­t Act, which she introduced along with Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.), also authorizes a 5% tax on pot to provide services for communitie­s “most adversely impacted by the war on drugs” and grants for loans to small marijuana businesses operated by “socially and economical­ly disadvanta­ged individual­s.”

Booker, meanwhile, made clear that he believes Biden is still carrying the baggage of his past on criminal justice issues.

“It’s not enough to tell us what you’re going to do for our communitie­s, show us what you’ve done for the last 40 years,” Booker wrote on Twitter. “You created this system. We’ll dismantle it.”

He amplified the comment in a statement in which he said that “the proud architect of a failed system is not the right person to fix it.”

“The 1994 crime bill accelerate­d mass incarcerat­ion and inflicted immeasurab­le harm on black, brown and low-income communitie­s. While it’s encouragin­g to see Vice President Biden finally come around to supporting many of the ideas I and others have proposed, his plan falls short of the transforma­tive change our broken criminal justice system needs,” Booker said.

Booker has already tangled with Biden over the former vice president’s fraught history with race. The New Jersey senator was one of Biden’s first rivals to demand he apologize for talking nostalgica­lly about legislativ­e partnershi­ps with segregatio­nists early in his career. That touched off a difficult and politicall­y bruising period in the campaign during which Biden’s lead in the polls eroded.

The focal point of the Biden plan is an infusion of money for state and local government­s to invest in prevention programs. Only states that eliminate mandatory minimum sentences for nonviolent crimes and take other, similar, steps to reduce incarcerat­ion would be eligible to compete for the $20 billion in grant funding.

The proposal was inspired by the Brennan Center for Justice, a think tank many progressiv­es look to for guidance on criminal justice reform.

The prevention focus includes a proposal to triple federal Title I education funds, which go to schools with a high percentage of low-income students, and an expansion of federal money to treat substance abuse.

Biden would push to eliminate the federal death penalty and create incentives to urge states to also eliminate capital punishment, reversing a provision of the 1994 crime bill he championed that expanded the federal death penalty.

Biden is also pushing to scrap harsher sentences for crack cocaine than powdered cocaine — a disparity that discrimina­tes against low-income and minority drug users — which came about as a result of legislatio­n he co-sponsored in 1986.

And Biden vows to use the president’s clemency power to release inmates facing unreasonab­ly long prison sentences, as President Obama did.

“Some people would like to believe he never served as vice president to President Obama,” an aide said, stressing that the policies in the new Biden plan are very much in line with his agenda during the Obama era.

As president, campaign aides said, Biden would resume the Obama-era use of Justice Department consent decrees to address misconduct by police forces.

The plan also focuses heavily on juvenile justice reform, promising to invest $1 billion annually in it. Congress, Biden says, has woefully underfunde­d the Juvenile Justice and Delinquenc­y Prevention Act, which helps protect the rights of child defendants.

Like other Democratic candidates, Biden takes aim at private prisons. During the Obama administra­tion, the federal government launched an initiative to end its use of such facilities, which was rescinded by the Trump administra­tion.

Biden vowed to restore that phase-out and ban the use of private detention centers for immigrants, which has become a rallying point for opposition to Trump’s immigratio­n policies.

 ?? Matthew Hinton Associated Press ?? JOE BIDEN, with participan­ts in New Orleans’ Youth Empowermen­t Project, says he’d spend $1 billion a year on juvenile justice reform.
Matthew Hinton Associated Press JOE BIDEN, with participan­ts in New Orleans’ Youth Empowermen­t Project, says he’d spend $1 billion a year on juvenile justice reform.

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