Jeff Sessions urges US prosecutors to target drugs in push against violent crime [View all]
Source: The Guardian
Jeff Sessions urges US prosecutors to target drugs in push against violent crime
Pivoting away from Obama-era priorities, attorney general sends
memo to US attorneys as experts warn that ‘focusing on drugs
does not make us safer’
Jamiles Lartey
Friday 10 March 2017 14.14 GMT
The attorney general, Jeff Sessions, is advising the federal prosecutors under his authority across the US to re-intensify the nation’s drug war as part of a Department of Justice initiative to target violent crime. Citing a 10.8% increase in the number of murders nationwide, and a decline in federal prosecution for violent crime, Sessions has issued a memo advising US attorneys “to employ the full complement of federal laws to address the problem of violent crime in your district”, including the use of prosecutions under the Controlled Substances Act.
The move mirrors several other hard pivots away from the priorities of the Obama-era DoJ and towards the hardline “tough on crime” rhetoric that Trump and Sessions have promoted. In recent weeks, Sessions has stated that his DoJ will roll back investigations into potential civil rights violations by police departments, and has reversed an order from Loretta Lynch’s DoJ to phase out the use of private prisons in the federal corrections system, painting a jarring picture of regression to reform-minded criminal justice advocates.
“We absolutely need to focus on the most violent offenders. But Sessions’ aggressive stance on crime, based on misleading statistics, shows we could be headed toward policies that don’t target the problem, such as another ‘war on drugs’,” said Inimai Chettiar, director of the Brennan Center’s justice program. “Research shows focusing on drug crimes does not make us safer. This was a major factor in making the United States the world’s number one jailer, and we should not repeat the mistakes of the past.”
Those mistakes, as Chettiar describes them, are part of what the former attorney general Eric Holder was trying to address when he issued a 2010 memorandum that encouraged prosecutors to use discretion in deciding when to file charges. This included not pursuing cases where “no substantial Federal interest” would be served, or where “there is an adequate non-criminal alternative to prosecution”, for example a program focused on rehabilitation.
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Read more:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/mar/10/jeff-sessions-drugs-violent-crime