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94 Nw. U. L. Rev. 1471 (1999-2000)
Safety Valve Failure: Low-Level Drug Offenders and the Federal Sentencing Guidelines

handle is hein.journals/illlr94 and id is 1481 raw text is: Copyright 2000 by Northwestern University School of Law         Printed in U.S.A.
Northwestern University Law Review                               Vol. 94, No. 4
Comments
SAFETY VALVE FAILURE: LOW-LEVEL DRUG
OFFENDERS AND THE FEDERAL SENTENCING
GUIDELINES
Jane L. Froyd
I. INTRODUCTION
Over the last two decades, Congress has completely overhauled federal
sentencing policies pertaining to drug-related offenses. First, in an effort to
curb discriminatory sentencing, Congress enacted the Federal Sentencing
Guidelines which require judges to impose sentences within particular
ranges.' Second, Congress enacted stiff mandatory minimum sentences for
certain drug-related offenses in an attempt to combat the proliferation of
drug crimes in America.2
Congress intended for these mandatory minimum sentences to apply
only to high- and mid-level drug offenders. However, Congress tied these
mandatory minimum sentences to the quantity of drugs involved in the
crime. This effectively eliminated the ability of judges to apply mitigating
factors that would normally reduce sentences for less culpable offenders
under the Federal Sentencing Guidelines' system of calculating sentences.3
Thus, low-level offenders also receive mandatory minimum sentences re-
gardless of their level of culpability.
Not only are low-level offenders receiving high sentences due to the
mandatory minimum sentencing scheme, but many high-level offenders are
able to avoid mandatory minimum sentences through a mechanism called
the substantial assistance departure.4 If a suspect is able and willing to
furnish the government with substantial assistance relating to an investiga-
tion, that suspect may be eligible for the substantial assistance downward
departure, thus allowing a judge to give the offender a sentence below the
 J.D. 2000, Northwestern University School of Law. I would like to thank the following people for
the encouragement and advice they offered while I was writing this comment: Professor Dorothy Rob-
erts, Professor Shari Diamond, editors Laura Holliday and Jennifer Smiley, Christopher Kamrath, Beth
Colgan, Sarah Mervine, and Mazda Antia.
' See infra Part II.
2 See infra Part III.
3 See infra Part IV.C.
4 See infra Part II.E.2.

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