Perhaps the most criticized tool of the war on drugs in America is the idea of mandatory minimums, or proscribe minimum jail sentences for those who are found to use or distribute drugs. The idea behind mandatory minimums, advocated by conservative Republicans and socially conservative Democrats, is that it forces judges to enforce narcotics laws which might be given more subjective treatment on a case-by-case basis. However, many reports and studies have shown that mandatory minimums affect minority offenders far more than white offenders. One study by Harvard professor William Brownsberger showed that mandatory minimums disproportionately were applied to users of crack cocaine, which is used in greater numbers by African American males than any other racial group.
From a constitutional and judicial standpoint, mandatory minimums hardly make sense. The most compelling constitutional argument against mandatory minimums is the use of the Eight Amendment clause preventing "cruel and unusual punishment." This provision is certainly subjective but on a spectrum between law abiding citizens and murderers, someone who uses drugs in the privacy of their homes and commits no other crime seems pretty insignificant. Therefore, the mandatory minimum sentencing guidelines imposed upon judges forces them into a decision that violates the Eighth Amendment. As well, the passage of laws by state legislatures and Congress have been subject to the interpretation of the judicial branch throughout American history. While mandatory minimum laws provide clear cut legal guidelines for judges, it ends up the discretion of the presiding judge how to sentence (or not sentence) plaintiffs before their court.
Published by Nicholas Katers
Nicholas Katers is a graduate of University of Wisconsin-Green Bay (BA, 2003) and the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (MA, 2007) in History and currently a freelance writer. You can find his work in the In... View profile
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