Congress Yet Again Fails To Pass Crack Cocaine Sentencing Reforms
A compromise to cram crack sentencing reform into the year-end omnibus spending bill fell apart at the last minute.

A once-promising bipartisan bill to erase the sentencing disparity between crack and powder cocaine failed to make it into a year-end omnibus spending bill winding through Congress, likely dooming efforts to pass crack cocaine sentencing reform for yet another legislative session.
Criminal justice advocates have been working for decades to roll back draconian crack cocaine laws passed by Congress in the 1980s. Those laws set the penalties for crack cocaine offenses at 100 times greater than equivalent powder cocaine offenses, which resulted in monstrously long and racially disparate sentences. In 2010 Congress passed a law reducing the sentencing ratio to 18–1, and advocates hoped to finally erase it once and for all this legislative session with the passage of the EQUAL Act.
The EQUAL Act would have reduced the penalties for federal crack cocaine offenses to the same level as those for powder cocaine offenses, and it would have made those changes retroactive, meaning federal crack offenders currently serving prison sentences would be eligible to have their sentences reduced. The EQUAL Act passed the House by a wide, bipartisan margin last year, raising hopes that it might move relatively smoothly through the Senate, where it collected a bipartisan group of co-sponsors that included Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D–N.Y.) and 11 Republicans.
But the bill never made it to the Senate floor. Its last hope was being jammed into the giant end-of-year spending bill. Reuters reported Friday that Senate negotiators had reached a potential compromise to appease Republicans. The compromise language would have reduced the sentencing disparity to 2.5–1, and would not have been retroactive. However, when the text of the 4,000-page, $1.7 trillion spending bill was released, the watered-down EQUAL Act was nowhere to be found.
Criminal justice advocacy groups were deeply disappointed to see the bill stumble with the finish line in sight.
"It is a searing indictment of a broken Beltway when a bill that passed the House with an overwhelming bipartisan vote, endorsed by law enforcement and civil rights leaders alike, with 11 Republican co-sponsors and filibuster-proof majority support in the Senate, and an agreement between the relevant committee Chairman and Ranking Member for inclusion in the end-of-year package, fails to make it to the President's desk," Holly Harris, president and executive director of the Justice Action Network, said in a press statement. "The American people deserve better."
It's unclear exactly why the deal was scuttled. Sen. Chuck Grassley (R–Iowa) pointed to the memo issued Friday by Attorney General Merrick Garland ordering federal prosecutors to effectively end the sentencing disparity through their charging decisions.
"That hard-won compromise has been jeopardized because the attorney general inappropriately took lawmaking into his own hands," Grassley told Reuters yesterday.
Sen. Tom Cotton (R–Ark.), one of the staunchest opponents of sentencing reform in the Senate, was also vocally opposed to the legislation. Cotton in fact introduced his own legislation last year to fix the sentencing disparity—by raising the penalties for powder cocaine offenses.
"If they want to eliminate the differences between the sentences, I'm perfectly willing to do that. But my proposal's a little different from theirs. They want to take down offenses for crack cocaine, I'm perfectly willing to increase sentences for powdered cocaine," Cotton said.
Cotton's position has fallen out of favor over the years, as more and more stories of people trapped under harsh mandatory minimum sentences have piled up. Take for example the case of Matthew Charles. Although he had a serious criminal record prior to his sentencing, Charles became a model inmate. He was a GED instructor and law clerk, he helped illiterate inmates decipher court documents, and he served his time without a single disciplinary infraction. Charles was released early from a 35-year mandatory minimum sentence for a crack cocaine offense because of the First Step Act of 2018, which retroactively applied the 2010 sentencing reductions.
Kevin Ring, the president of the criminal justice advocacy nonprofit FAMM, which opposes mandatory minimum sentences, called the failure to pass the EQUAL Act "shameful" and "sickening."
"Congress heard from families who have suffered the most because of this racist and indefensible disparity—and then chose to leave those people behind," Ring said in a press release. "While members of Congress fly home to spend the holidays with their families, thousands of families now face the prospect of being separated for years or even decades longer than necessary—all because of the cowardice and incompetence of our elected leaders."
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Black lives matter
Which is why the congressional black caucus (who speek for all black people, because come on they are infants am I right) pushed for crack to have harsher penalties. Take it up with your party of choice.
Most, if not all, of them have seen the error of their ways. I care a lot more about people are doing today than what they were doing thirty years ago.
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>>FAMM, which opposes mandatory minimum sentences
#metoo
""If they want to eliminate the differences between the sentences, I'm perfectly willing to do that. But my proposal's a little different from theirs. They want to take down offenses for crack cocaine, I'm perfectly willing to increase sentences for powdered cocaine," Cotton said."
Never change Tom, never change. Keep doubling down on failed war on drugs.
It sucks that he's right about a lot of things but he's also such a piece of shit.
"Criminal justice advocates have been working for decades to roll back draconian crack cocaine laws passed by Congress in the 1980s."
Come on CJ. Let’s not forget to mention who started this problem. Joe Biden. We all know if it were a Republican, you certainly wouldn’t have failed to mention it.
Like how you fail to mention the guy who signed those bills into law?
Hey now, it's not all Slerpy Joe's fault. He was acting at the behest of the Congressional Black Caucus. That makes this effort to undo the great gains the CBC has gotten through congress against the oppressive backdrop of White Supremacy as racist as anything to appear on the last few years
I guess it just slipped through the crack.
The difference between crack and coke and cocoa leaf is the same as the difference between automatic, semi and a muzzle loading musket. At least according to the people who have to live with such things.
It was always a pipe dream.
smoke and mirror.
If you try to reform these laws you’re gonna end up between a rock and a hard place!
The problem is that your average Congressman is familiar with snorting powdered cocaine and they know it's not harmful. Very few of them are familiar with smoking crack and believe it is very dangerous and will turn them black.
Anthony Weiner and Hunter Biden both agree.
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And Joe Biden’s legislative legacy continues.
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I laugh every time I read something like this. The Democrats are playing both sides against the middle. They are sucking up to their base with saying that they want to legalize drugs and at the same time they are placating the Police and Prison Guard unions by doing nothing. In the 90's Clinton was handing out block grants all over the place to increase the number of Police to curry favor with their Unions. Even with the "Defund the Police" bullshit, the Police Unions still support the Democrats.
In the mid 80's I was in the Navy. We shared a hangar with Customs and DEA. One evening after work we were having a small cookout at the tables outside the hangar. The beer was flowing pretty good and some of the Customs and DEA guys were there. We started talking about the best way to get rid of drugs. One of the DEA guys (Pretty Senior in the area) said that it was simple. "Legalize them. Take the big money out of it. Then it's not worth producing or pushing. It's never going to happen though. There's too much money to be made in selling them and too much money to be made in fighting them and both sides own Congresscritters." That was in 1987, I have yet to see anything that proves his statement wrong.
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"That hard-won compromise has been jeopardized because the attorney general inappropriately took lawmaking into his own hands," Grassley told Reuters yesterday.
Well, if you aren't going to do your job ... somebody has to.