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18 Ohio St. J. Crim. L. 283 (2020-2021)
The Federal Judiciary's Role in Drug Law Reform in an Era of Congressional Dysfunction

handle is hein.journals/osjcl18 and id is 291 raw text is: The Federal Judiciary's Role in Drug Law
Reform in an Era of Congressional Dysfunction
Erica Zunkel & Alison Siegler*
ABSTRACT
While state drug law reform is moving apace, federal drug law reform has
moved much more slowly. Many, including the Judicial Conference of the
United States and the United States Sentencing Commission, have urged
Congress to enact substantive federal drug law reform for years. But
Congress has not acted. As a result, the federal system continues to single
out drug offenses for harsh treatment at the bail stage and the sentencing
stage-the front end and back end of the federal mass incarceration crisis.
In this paper, we argue that federal judges have a critical role to play in
future federal drug law reform in light of Congress' long-standingfailures
to meaningfully change the laws. At the front end, judges should
encourage the release of more people on bail by closely scrutinizing
prosecutors' motions for temporary detention and giving little weight to
the Bail Reform Act's presumption of detention. Data shows that the
statutory drug presumption is overbroad and does a poor job of
determining who is a risk offlight or a danger to the community. At the
back end, judges should issue categorical policy disagreements with the
drug sentencing guidelines and the career offender sentencing guideline
using the Supreme Court's blueprint in Kimbrough v. United States.
Judges should issue sentences below these guidelines because they are not
based on empirical evidence, over-punish drug offenses, and result in
racial disparities. At both ends, judges should rest their decisions on the
evidence that the drug presumption, the drug sentencing guidelines, and
the career offender sentencing guideline are flawed. While judicial action
is not a cure for Congressional inaction, it would send a clear message
from one co-equal branch of government to another that substantive
reform is urgently needed.
* Erica Zunkel is an Associate Clinical Professor of Law and Associate Director of the Federal
Criminal Justice Clinic at the University of Chicago Law School. Alison Siegler is a Clinical Professor
of Law and the Founder and Director of the Federal Criminal Justice Clinic at the University of Chicago
Law School. Thank you to George Colligan, Stephanie Didwania, Jelani Jefferson Exum, Amy Kimpel,
Adam Simon, and Jonathan Wroblewski for thoughtful comments and Carly Gibbons for helpful
research assistance.

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