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Interfaith Drug Policy Initiative Testifies
in Maryland House Judiciary Committee for Mandatory Minimum Repeal
Bill
Most Religious Denominations Agree
March 18, 2004
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MEDIA
ADVISORY---FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:
Charles Thomas, Interfaith Drug Policy Initiative executive director,
301-938-1577
Annapolis – Charles Thomas, executive director
of the Interfaith Drug Policy Initiative will address the Maryland
House Judiciary Committee today in favor of H.B. 1110, a bill
to repeal mandatory minimum prison sentencing for drug offenders.
(The hearing is scheduled for 1 PM, but testimony could continue
until the late afternoon.)
“I am here to testify to the broad consensus among mainstream
religious denominations that mandatory minimum sentencing for
drug offenders is cruel and inappropriate,” said Charles
Thomas. “Politicians are mistaken if they think there is
any serious moral backing for these oppressive laws.”
During the 1980s, many state legislatures passed laws that force
judges to give long, fixed prison terms to people convicted of
certain drug crimes (including nonviolent offenders). These laws
are largely responsible for the massive increase in the prison
population. Many people who initially favored these harsh mandatory
sentences are changing their minds after seeing how ineffective
and devastating they are.
The following national religious denominations have made
unequivocal statements supporting the repeal of mandatory minimum
sentences for drug offenders: Roman Catholic (the largest
religious denomination in the state, comprised of 25% of Marylanders),
United Methodist (14% of Marylanders, 3rd largest religious
denomination), Evangelical Lutheran (6% of Marylanders,
4th largest religious denomination), Presbyterian (3%
of Marylanders, 5th largest religious denomination), United
Church of Christ, Unitarian Universalist, and the National
Council of Churches (a national coalition of 140,000
congregations from 36 Protestant, Anglican and Orthodox denominations).
The actual statements made by these religious bodies will be available
at the hearing and by request.
“It is an egregious miscarriage of justice that Maryland’s
prisons are filled with mostly black, low-level, non-violent drug
offenders,” said Thomas. “This policy is tearing apart
families and breaking the state budget, while doing nothing to
prevent people — especially young people — from abusing
drugs. We pray that legislators will have the compassion and courage
to repeal mandatory minimum laws and restore sentencing discretion
to judges.”
The Interfaith Drug Policy Initiative, based
in Silver Spring, Maryland, is a national organization giving public
witness to the statements of religious denominations and other faith-based
groups calling for more just and compassionate policies regarding
drug use, abuse and addiction.
IDPI is part of a state-wide coalition called the Maryland Campaign
for Treatment Not Incarceration. This campaign includes MD NAACP,
Episcopal Diocese of MD, Justice Policy Institute, MD Council on
Alcoholism & Drug Dependence, MD League of Women Voters, National
Black Police Association, and more.
Interfaith
Drug
Policy Initiative, P.O.
Box 6299, Washington, D.C. 20015
Phone: 301-933-7681 Fax:301-933-7682 |
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