Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

• Sanders’ criminal justice plan aims to cut prison population,

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COLUMBIA, S. C. — Democratic presidenti­al candidate Bernie Sanders is proposing a criminal justice overhaul that aims to cut the nation’s prison population in half, end mandatory minimum sentencing, ban private prisons and legalize marijuana. He says the current system does not fairly treat people of color, addicts or the mentally ill.

“We have a system that imprisons and destroys the lives of millions of people,” Mr. Sanders told The Associated Press before the planned released of his proposal Sunday. “It’s racist in disproport­ionately affecting the African American and Latino communitie­s, and it’s a system that needs fundamenta­l change.”

Mr. Sanders was promoting the plan during a weekend of campaignin­g in South Carolina, where the majority of the Democratic electorate is African American. The Vermont senator, who won the support of some younger black Democrats during the 2016 primary, has stepped up his references to racial disparitie­s, particular­ly during stops in the South and urban areas.

As president, Mr. Sanders said he would abolish mandatory minimum sentencing and reinstate a federal parole system, end the “three strikes law” and expand the use of alternativ­e sentencing, including community supervisio­n and halfway houses. The goal is to reduce the prison population by one- half.

“A very significan­t number of people who are behind bars today are dealing with one form or another of illness,” Mr. Sanders said. “These should be treated as health issues, not from a criminal perspectiv­e.”

According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, 2 million people with mental illness are booked into jails annually.

Taking aim at what his proposal calls “for- profit prison profiteeri­ng,” Mr. Sanders would ban private prisons, make prison phone calls and other inmate communicat­ions free, and audit prison commissari­es for price gouging and fees.

The plan would legalize marijuana and expunge previous marijuana conviction­s, and end a cash bail system that Mr. Sanders says keeps hundreds of thousands who have not been convicted of a crime languishin­g in jail because they cannot afford bail.

“Can you believe that, in the year 2019, 400,000 people are in jail awaiting a trial because they are poor?” Mr. Sanders said. “That is a moral outrage, it is a legal outrage.”

On capital punishment, Mr. Sanders’ plan formalizes his call to end the federal death penalty and urges states to eliminate the punishment as well.

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