Jemele Hill Can't Be Serious With This Take About the Circus Engulfing Dianna...
Iranian Supreme Leader Sidelined As Military Takes More Control
Trump Torches Legacy Media Outlets for Lying About Iran War
Illegal Immigrant Who Sexually Assaulted Nine High School Girls in Virginia Gets a...
Check Out Cory Booker's Unhinged Speech at the Michigan Democratic Women's Caucus
President Trump Responds to Tim Cook's Announcement He's Stepping Down As Apple CEO
Hakeem Jeffries Used the Bible to Justify Disenfranchising Virginia Voters
ActBlue’s Legal Troubles Are Mounting
Tom Steyer Might Be California's Next Governor, and He Once Wanted President Trump...
This Wrong Way Driver Killed an LA Sheriff Recruit, Injured Several Others. He'll...
PNC Steps Up for Pittsburgh's NFL Draft
President Trump Lays Into the Supreme Court Over Their Tariff Ruling
General Keane Says We Are Watching the Disarray of Iranian Leadership Play Out...
Here's What Was on That Seized Iranian Tanker
Gutfeld Blasts Gov Tim Walz As a 'Traitor' for Attacking Trump on Foreign...
OPINION

Holder Backs Release of 5,500 Crack Offenders

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Holder Backs Release of 5,500 Crack Offenders
(Newser) – Eric Holder today told the US Sentencing Commission that he supports a proposal to release thousands of federal prisoners convicted on crack-related offenses. Until Congress changed them last year, federal sentencing guidelines gave crack users—who are predominantly poor and black—much harsher sentences than powder cocaine users. Now, Holder wants that change applied to current prisoners, the LA Times reports.
Advertisement

The change could affect some 12,000 prisoners, but Holder’s advocating it be limited to the roughly 5,500 whose crimes did not involve weapons and who were not repeat offenders. “There is simply no just or logical reason why their punishments should be dramatically more severe than those of other cocaine offenders,” he argued. If the commission approves the plan, it’ll go into effect on Nov. 1, shaving an average three years off each prisoner’s time.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement