America Criminalizes Too Much and Punishes Too Much
When those on parole or probation are included, one out of every 47 adults is under “some form of correctional supervision.”
When those on parole or probation are included, one out of every 47 adults is under “some form of correctional supervision.”
The president's decision to drop out after insisting he never would continued a pattern established by a long career of politically convenient reversals.
The former and possibly future president hopes voters will overlook his incoherence.
It's the war on drugs all over again, folks...
Lee announced in 2021 that he was fast-tracking clemency petitions for inmates serving mandatory minimums that had since been repealed. Earlier this year, he scrapped the program with applications still pending.
If drug warriors really wanted to punish "those responsible" for the transgender activist's death, they would start by arresting themselves.
Charlie Lynch’s ordeal is a vivid reminder of a senseless prohibition policy that persists thanks to political inertia.
The Supreme Court mulls how to apply a mandatory minimum for gun possession by people convicted of drug felonies.
Florida's mandatory minimum sentences created a large, elderly prison population. Now the bill is coming due.
His bloody rhetoric undermines his defense of the sentencing reforms he proudly embraced as president.
A House-approved bill that the president supports would expand the draconian penalties he supposedly wants to abolish.
The legislation, whose authors say two-fifths of prisoners are locked up without a "compelling public safety justification," would reward states that take a more discriminating approach.
According to the Justice Department's reading of the law, the crime need not involve impersonation or even fraud.
The paper pushes modest reforms while endorsing continued criminalization.
Although both bills have broad bipartisan support, they never got a vote in the Senate and were excluded from the omnibus spending bill.
The legal distinction between the smoked and snorted forms of cocaine never made sense.
A compromise to cram crack sentencing reform into the year-end omnibus spending bill fell apart at the last minute.
The attorney general's memo to prosecutors is an improvement, but it is no substitute for legislation.
The court says a 51-year "life" sentence for a 2015 murder violated the Eighth Amendment.
The Senate majority leader has repeatedly blocked a bill that would address the robbery threat to state-licensed pot shops.
Federal and state agencies are busting unlicensed marijuana merchants, who face decades in prison.
Although the Arkansas senator claims to be targeting "violent felons," his draconian bill would affect many people who pose no threat.
The proposed rule, which targets the cigarettes that black smokers overwhelmingly prefer, will harm the community it is supposed to help.
The 75 commutations announced today, while impressive compared to the pitiful records of previous presidents, pale beside a huge backlog of petitions.
Jonathan Wall, whose federal trial begins on May 2, notes that many people openly engage in similar conduct with impunity.
The Supreme Court nominee's critics say she clearly did, but several federal appeals courts disagree.
The federal mandatory minimum didn't leave many options.
Rogel Aguilera-Mederos faced harsh punishment under the state’s mandatory minimum sentences for insisting on the right to a trial.
Rogel Aguilera-Mederos is set to die in prison, thanks to Colorado's mandatory sentencing laws.
The annual photo op takes on cruel undertones as drug offenders continue to suffer under harsh federal prison sentences.
People convicted of possessing child pornography receive long sentences, but new data suggest they are rarely arrested for contact offenses after their release.
For possessing a gun while committing a crime—even when no one is killed—too many defendants are slammed with sentences decades or even centuries longer than justice demands.
The memo reverses a directive from former Attorney General Jeff Sessions that ordered federal prosecutors to throw the book at low-level drug offenders.
Theresa Mathis was in the middle of a 25-year mandatory minimum sentence when she sent Reason a letter asking for help.
The Democratic presidential nominee cannot escape one of his major legacies.
While that's nothing to sneeze at, it is a modest accomplishment in the context of a federal prison system that keeps more than 150,000 Americans behind bars.
The president's daughter says "we’re just getting started." Some details would be nice.
The new law features harsher penalties, 12-hour detentions, and other invitations to abuse government power
A Florida prosecutor's office reviewed the cases and agreed to resentencing for nearly two dozen inmates, calling it "a matter of fundamental fairness."
Harris and Trump are both right that the Democratic nominee has a long record of championing draconian penalties.
The American University professor called for "drug peace" at a time when both major parties were committed to ever-escalating violence.
Too often, minor drug crimes turn into mandatory minimum offenses with lengthy sentences despite the fact these types of cases rarely involve drug dealing to minors.
It's an interesting strategy for a president who ran in 2016 on a Nixonian "law and order" platform.
If the president wants voters to take him seriously, he should stop pretending the problem has been solved.
A new Drug Policy Alliance report highlights this puzzling and dangerous inconsistency.
Somewhere between 650 and 1,000 Florida inmates are serving sentences under draconian opioid trafficking laws that have since been rolled back.
Slowly but surely, some of the most glaring problems of our criminal justice system are being addressed.
Judges would be permitted to rethink sentences after 10 years have been served, particularly for inmates over the age of 50.