Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jun 1999 Date: 06/11/1999 Source: Wall Street Journal (NY) Author: Jamie Fellner Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n554/a08.html Note: Mr. McNamara, former police chief of San Jose, Calif., is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. Contrary to your implication, most of the 22,386 men and women in New York prisons for drug offenses are low-level nonviolent offenders, guilty at most of possessing or peddling minute amounts of drugs. Few are the dangerous, violent individuals for whom incarceration is warranted. Nearly one in three of drug offenders sent to New York prisons have no prior convictions for any felony. Three-quarters had never been convicted of a violent felony. One in four were convicted of illegal possession. But of those convicted of sales-related conduct, few were the serious traffickers for whom the laws' long sentences were intended. The preponderance were mere minions in the drug trade, selling small quantities, addicts trying to support their habit, couriers trying to earn extra cash. On the street, the line between possession and sales is fluid: many who possess drugs sell some of what they have in order to be able to buy more for their own use. Depending on where they were in the drug cycle when arrested, they can be charged with sales or possession. But regardless of the legal label affixed to their conduct, they are still nonviolent, low-level offenders for whom years in prison is a disproportionately harsh sentence. Jamie Fellner Counsel Human Rights Watch New York