Life + 185 Years: Three Stories of Incarceration
Three people convicted of non-violent drug crimes. Their stories are the stuff of nightmares.
Their stories begin differently but end in the same place. Antoinette Frink, who holds a masters degree in school psychology, was the owner of an auto dealership in Ohio; she sold a dozen vehicles to customers who were in the business of distributing cocaine. Luis Rivera, a former pilot and Army officer, began smuggling drugs from Colombia into the United States in his twenties. Barbra Scrivner was a young mother whose husband was involved in selling crystal meth.
All three are nonviolent offenders who were sentenced to federal prison in the 1980s, when our national anxieties about violence became public policy with a punitive intent. The Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986 stripped judges of their own discretion and introduced mandatory minimum sentencing for drug criminals. The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 ratcheted up the length of those sentences and funded a spree of prison construction to contain an unprecedented rise in the prison population.
Today, our prisons hold more people per capita than any nation in the world and they cost taxpayers a fortune. Mounting evidence demonstrates that mass incarceration has done almost nothing to reduce crime. Yet thousands of nonviolent drug offenders, like Luis Rivera, Barbra Scrivner, and Antoinette Frink, continue to waste their lives behind bars.
Recently, there's been promise of reform. President Obama made history by discussing criminal justice reform in his State of the Union address this year. Clemency Project 2014 is a group composed of lawyers and advocates launched at the request of the Department of Justice. It's designed to offer hope to low-level, non-violent offenders. A bi-partisan consensus had emerged to acknowledge the errors – and reverse the overreach – in sentencing policies of decades past.
Yet only one month ago, The Washington Post declared President Obama "one of the most merciless presidents in history." The Clemency Project stalled under the weight of over 35,000 applications. With each petition taking a month to review, promises of mercy appeared like false hope.
This week, Obama made criminal justice the focus of his weekly address. Will persistence pay off for the tens of thousands of non-violent inmates serving unnecesarily long sentences in federal prisons?
For some, it already has.
COMMUTATIONS
Luis Rivera might have died in prison were it not for an innovative legal strategy advanced by his lawyer, Sam Sheldon. The Holloway Doctrine states that even after every legal appeal has been exhausted, courts may still reduce any sentence that is disproportionately severe.
The district court agreed. In a rare reversal, Judge Frank Seay, the same judge who sentenced Rivera in 1985, granted his immediate release in 2015. "Rehabilitation appears hopeless for a person of your experience and knowledge," Judge Seay declared while sentencing Rivera, 30 years ago. "My intent is that you spend the rest of your life in federal institutions." Today, Rivera is rebuilding his life in Florida. He dreams of being a helicopter pilot.
Barbra Scrivner's third plea for clemency was the charm. Scrivner credits Families Against Mandatory Minimums (FAMM) for publicizing the injustice of her sentence and bringing her case to the attention of the federal government. After spending 20 years in prison for conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine, Scrivner's sentence was commuted by President Obama in 2015.
Antoinette Frink spent over 11 years in prison for conspiracy to distribute cocaine. Her sentence was commuted by President Clinton in 2000. Today she is a practicing tax preparer in Georgia.
Runs 9:22 minutes.
Produced and edited by Todd Krainin. Cameras by Austin Bragg and Krainin.
Reason TV arranged interviews with Rivera, Scrivner and Frink with the assistance from FAMM.
Music: "Eileen" by Lee Rosevere and "Swollen Cloud" by Poddington Bear.
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Obama made history by discussing criminal justice reform in his State of the Union address this year.
That's a pretty low bar for making history.
Many bars have been made low for the would-be emperor to stumble over.
Good to see that system still punishes people, harshly, for things that, barring harm against the state, are non-crimes.
As opposed to Reason's usual fair of choosing mothers who've murdered their own children or men guilty of B&E or theft to portray as victims.
And at yet I still detected a bit of "sympathetic overreach". While vices are not crimes, I don't really have much concern what the dreams of a former drug runner were. Having a rational desire to not put people in boxes over drugs (and the costs) doesn't immediately extend to dewy eyed group hugs. Until I have interest enough to care, Mr. Rivera could easily be/have been involved in a black market that IS illegal. In short, should never have been illegal, should never have been in prison, but WAS black market, so I'll hold off on the tears.
"Some people call it black market. I call it free market. Mmm-hmm." - Carl Childers
Your answer makes no sense to me. You have no sympathy for these people because other people decided to make their non-crimes illegal and punish them severely? They were locked up for decades for actions that did not harm the life, liberty, or property of others. I guess they weren't locked up for the *right* non-crimes.
BTW, your comment about black markets is not clear. Are you just saying that a black market is illegal, which is a tautology, or are you saying that it is illegal for the government to ban certain things and in doing so, they created a black market? I am thinking of how the fed needed a constitutional amendment to ban one product (alcohol) but don't seem to need one to ban other products, esp. drugs. So maybe that is the idea. Your meaning is not clear to me.
Make that "feds", not "fed".
Well, if you used a sufficiently nonsensical interpretation of the commerce clause, as the courts do, you would see that everything in existence is interstate commerce, and therefore the federal government is allowed to regulate or ban it all.
I believe we have more of a problem, in general, with over-criminalization than over-incarceration (though one leads to the other, it's important which you focus on).
Too many things are illegal. Too many things are classified as felonies.
That said, I am always wary of these types of articles. This is the journalistic equivalent of when politicians trot a poor waif out on stage for the "think of the children" push.
I'm sure it's effective, but I've found out more than once that when you dig into the cases of the people presented, they're not nearly as put-upon and angelic as the article makes them appear. That. to my mind, undermines the strategy.
I'd rather focus on repealing the laws than focus on sob stories of prisoners. For one thing, a lot of prisoners are highly unsympathetic people. Drug crime tends to attract bad people -- people who'd be committing other crimes even if we ended the war on drugs (which we should).. Think about it. Most of the people who frequent this site are anti war on drugs, and simultaneously have managed to avoid ever becoming drug felons. I'm sure a lot of you have smoked your share of weed but that's not predominately the type of person who is doing felony time for drugs. Most of them are people who decided that flaunting the law to make a buck was OK.
Here is another example of sentencing gone wrong...introducing Lenny Singleton.
Lenny committed 8 "grab & dash" robberies in 7 days while high on alcohol & crack. He did NOT have a gun. He did NOT murder anyone. In fact, no one was even physically injured and not one person filed as a "victim." He stole less than $550 & these were his first felonies. He earned a college degree & served in our Navy before his addiction.
Lenny received 2 Life Sentences + 100 yrs. The judge, w/o any explanation to the courtroom, gave him more time than rapists, child molesters, & murderers.
Lenny works every business day, lives in the Honor's Dorm, takes every available class on self-improvement, and in his spare time, Lenny co-authored a book to help others called "Love Conquers All." During the entire 20+ years he has been in prison, he has not received a single infraction for anything???rare for lifers.
It will cost taxpayers well over a million dollars to keep Lenny for the rest of his life for stealing less than $550 in crimes where no one was physically injured. That million dollars would be better spent on preventative education, rehabilitation services, or rebuilding infrastructures???on anything other than keeping one man, who is deserving of a second chance, who didn't physically injure anyone, and who has already spent 20+ years in prison, locked up for life.
Please learn more & sign Lenny's petition today at http://www.justice4lenny.org.
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