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1 Brennan Center Support for the EQUAL Act 1 (2021)

handle is hein.brennan/bncrstf0001 and id is 1 raw text is: BRENNAN
CENTER
FOR JUSTICE
The Honorable Charles E. Schumer
United States Senate
Washington, D.C. 20510
November 17, 2021
RE: Brennan Center Support for the EQUAL Act
Dear Majority Leader Schumer:
We write on behalf of the Brennan Center for Justice to share the Center's strong support
for the EQUAL Act, and to encourage the Senate to advance the Act using any legislative
vehicle at its disposal. As you know, the EQUAL Act would end the sentencing disparity
between crack and powder cocaine once and for all.' Passing the Act would be a major
step toward reducing racial disparities in the federal criminal legal system, and it would
show that such reforms can be both transformative and bipartisan. We urge you to seize
this opportunity while the moment lasts.
Today, federal drug mandatory minimums begin to apply at the 28-gram level for crack
cocaine, but at the 500-gram level for powder cocaine, creating a roughly 18:1 sentencing
disparity.2 Before the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010, the gap was even starker  100:1
despite the fact that crack and powder cocaine are all but identical in their effects.3 There
is no justification in policy or science for either sentencing disparity; indeed, as Justice
Sonia Sotomayor recently wrote in Terry v. United States, there never was.4 Yet such
disparate sentencing has persisted for a quarter-century, helping drive the
disproportionate incarceration of Black men and women in the federal system.'
According to one study, between 1991 to 2016, Black individuals were sentenced to
federal prison for crack cocaine offenses seven times more often than whites, even
though most crack users were and still are white.6
For years the Brennan Center has advocated for reforms that close the crack/powder
sentencing disparity and provide relief to those affected by it.7 Now the time has come to
end the disparity altogether. Judging from the overwhelming 361-66 vote by which the
EQUAL Act passed the House of Representatives, lawmakers in both parties appear to
agree.' Yet we also understand the challenges of legislating in a closely divided Senate,
even on issues that enjoy bipartisan support, such as this one.
We therefore encourage you to use all tools at your disposal to ensure this vital reform
reaches the President's desk. Specifically, we ask that you consider including the

Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law
120 Broadway, Suite 1750 New York, NY 10271

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