The Record (Troy, NY)

Tough on criminal justice reform

- Cal Thomas Cal Thomas, America’s most-syndicated columnist, is the author of 10 books.

Republican­s and conservati­ves dating back at least to Richard Nixon have used the slogan “tough on crime” and its corollary “lock ‘em up and throw away the key” as electoral red meat.

The problem is what to do when inmates are released with few skills, fewer job prospects and a bleak future that leads some to commit new crimes that land them in prison again at taxpayers’ expense.

The Senate, in what may be the only bipartisan act during the remaining two years of President Trump’s first and possibly only term, has overwhelmi­ngly passed legislatio­n that would significan­tly reform the criminal justice system, which is often more criminal than just.

The measure revises a number of sentencing laws, including the “three strikes” penalty for drug felonies, reducing what is now a mandatory life sentence to 25 years. It also retroactiv­ely limits the disparity in sentencing guidelines between crack and powder cocaine offenses. Civil rights groups have long argued that this disparity disproport­ionally impacted African-American offenders because they are more likely to use crack than powdered cocaine.

According to the Republican Policy Committee, the measure strives to “reduce recidivism by allowing low, or minimum-risk prisoners to earn time credits toward earlier transfer to prerelease custody such as a halfway house if they participat­e in certain recidivism-reducing programs while in prison.”

As the Associated Press reported, according to the Congressio­nal Budget Office, “the bill would not cover state jails and prisons, ( but) would reduce the federal inmate population by about 53,000 people in one year.”

Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) seemed to acknowledg­e that current sentencing guidelines are not good for either the offender or the public when he said the legislatio­n is “about being smart on crime and getting the best results.”

Quovadis Marshall, 38, lobbied Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) for reform. Marshall served more than seven years in prison for robbing a Waterloo convenienc­e store. In a telephone interview, Marshall told me the bill not only restores to judges more leeway in sentencing, but it also allows for the convicted to be sent to prisons closer to their homes, preserving family ties.

Marshall believes intact families are the key to keeping people from returning to prison. One out of 28 children has a parent or relative in prison, he says, but that in the black community, it is one out of nine.

Marshall is now pastor of a church in Waterloo, Iowa. The church sits across the street from the store he robbed. It is a daily reminder, Marshall says, of his deed and how far he’s come. He supports the bill because it also expands opportunit­ies for faith-based programs, which he believes are key to reducing the recidivism rate. Statistics bear this out.

Like most legislatio­n, this bill isn’t perfect, but it’s a start. It should not be the end.

Senators Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) and John Kennedy (R-La.) offered three amendments they said would protect the pub-

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