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FBI Director Defends "Mass Incarceration"

Discussion in 'Sports and News' started by YankeeFan, Oct 30, 2015.

  1. YankeeFan

    YankeeFan Well-Known Member

    The American people? "Many of them are stupid."

    Ben Carson on Americans: "Many of them are stupid."
     
  2. da man

    da man Well-Known Member

    Good one. How about "Hands up, don't shoot!"
     
  3. old_tony

    old_tony Well-Known Member

    Obama saying "What we can't do is cherry-pick data," might be the funniest thing I've ever read.
     
  4. Jake_Taylor

    Jake_Taylor Well-Known Member

    Well, to be fair, any person who has been elected to high office in the past 100 years using that sentence is pretty laughable.
     
  5. bigpern23

    bigpern23 Well-Known Member

    I'm quite certain those two officers are rather glad their dash camera was recording the encounter. Imagine if it hadn't been.
     
  6. da man

    da man Well-Known Member

    Exactly. As noted, the Ferguson incident wasn't caught on camera. That's why saying cops might be afraid of cameras is wrong. They're more likely to be afraid to do anything at this point.
     
  7. YankeeFan

    YankeeFan Well-Known Member

    Jeff Sessions Washington Post op-ed:

    Drug trafficking is an inherently violent business. If you want to collect a drug debt, you can’t, and don’t, file a lawsuit in court. You collect it by the barrel of a gun. For the approximately 52,000 Americans who died of a drug overdose in 2015, drug trafficking was a deadly business.

    Yet in 2013, subject to limited exceptions, the Justice Department ordered federal prosecutors not to include in charging documents the amount of drugs being dealt when the actual amount was large enough to trigger a mandatory minimum sentence. Prosecutors were required to leave out objective facts in order to achieve sentences lighter than required by law. This was billed as an effort to curb mass incarceration of low-level offenders, but in reality it covered offenders apprehended with large quantities of dangerous drugs. The result was that federal drug prosecutions went down dramatically — from 2011 to 2016, federal prosecutions fell by 23 percent. Meanwhile, the average sentence length for a convicted federal drug offender decreased 18 percent from 2009 to 2016.

    Before that policy change, the violent crime rate in the United States had fallen steadily for two decades, reaching half of what it was in 1991. Within one year after the Justice Department softened its approach to drug offenders, the trend of decreasing violent crime reversed. In 2015, the United States suffered the largest single-year increase in the overall violent crime rate since 1991.


    Opinion | Jeff Sessions: Being soft on sentencing means more violent crime. It’s time to get tough again.
     
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