Crack to Cocaine Ratio Will Change
The Sentencing Guidelines on crack have been long outdated for the past two decades and until last week it appeared that no change would occur until next year. That all changed on Wednesday when a representative from the Department of Justice announced that the new (Obama) administration was taking the position that the prior crack to cocaine ratio would no long be this administrations position. Instead Obama came through on one of his promises. The Department of Justice announced at this hearing that the new position would be one of equal weight between crack and cocaine. In plan English, one gram of crack cocaine is equal to one gram of powder cocaine. The discrepancy has long impacted the black population of this country. The announcement will not allow for retroactive application, but will provide relief for many federal crack cases that are pending sentencing. The hope will be for Congress to pass an amendment that is retroactive.
Criminal defense attorneys will now be able to make the most of this statement and provide district court judges with very little room to give a crack indictment more weight than a cocaine indictment. The Justice Department will be hard pressed to allow a United States Attorney to continue arguing for a higher sentence for crack cocaine. Our firm currently has several crack/cocaine cases in Charleston, Florence, Columbia, Miami, Myrtle Beach, Ft. Lauderdale and New York. The new change will allow many mandatory minimum sentences to be avoided. Many defendant's facing a 20 year mandatory minimum will now be facing 3 to 6 years depending on their criminal history.
Our Myrtle Beach Lawyer will travel to Charleston, Florence, Columbia or Miami to handle crack to cocaine case. We also have appeal attorneys in South Carolina that handle federal appeals. These appeals to the 4th Circuit in Richmond, Virginia are time consuming but can lead to reversals of convictions and reductions in Sentencing. Contact our appellate attorneys in South Carolina if you have a loved one in custody for a crack to cocaine case.