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LEGISLATION
U.S. House passes tough anti-gang law
The U.S. House of Representatives on Wednesday passed
tough legislation that imposes a 10-year minimum sentences on people
convicted of gang violence, expands the reach of the death penalty and
adds years of extra jail time for gang members who are illegal
immigrants. The Gang Deterrence and Community Protection Act of 2005,
popularly known as the “Gangbusters Bill,” passed easily by 279 to 144
in the Republican-led House. Seventy one Democrats supported the
Republican majority while 20 Republicans voted against the bill.
Sponsors of the bill said it was necessary because of an alarming
increase in gang violence. The Justice Department estimates there are
more than 25,000 gangs active in the United States with more than
750,000 members.
“We're talking about machete attacks, witness
intimidation, extortion, cold-blooded assassinations, cutting off
peoples' fingers, cutting off their arms, cutting off their heads,” the
bill's author, Virginia Republican Randy Forbes, said during the House
debate.
But opponent Virginia Democrat Bobby Scott replied: “In most
jurisdictions, it is already illegal to take a machete and cut someone's
hand off. I haven't heard complaints from the local police that they
need a new federal law to help deal with those crimes.”
The bill imposes a mandatory 10 year-sentence for an act of violence by
a gang member. For serious assaults, the minimum goes up to 20 years;
for kidnapping, aggravated sexual abuse or maiming, it is 30 years. For
crimes resulting in a death, life without parole or the death penalty
would apply.
Minors treated as adults
The legislation also requires that juveniles 16 and
older be treated as adults for some gang-related crimes. Rep. Phil
Gingrey, a Georgia Republican, said one of every three murders in the
United States was committed by a juvenile with gang connections.
Scott said a person convicted of a fist-fight, for whom it was a second
offense, could face 10 years in prison.
The House also passed an amendment that would add a further five years
to the sentence when the violator was an illegal immigrant and 15 years
if the offender had previously been deported and returned illegally to
the United States.
That passed by 266 to 159. Fifty one Democrats supported the amendment
and 12 Republicans opposed it. The outlook for the legislation in the
Senate was uncertain.
Crime rates have fallen sharply in the United States
over the past decade and are now around 33 percent lower than in 1994.
But local police in many areas of the nation report increased incidence
of youth and gang violence since 2000.
Mandatory sentences have been a major factor in the growth of the U.S.
prison system, which has quadrupled in size since 1980 to a population
of 2.1 million, the world's largest.
“Mandatory sentencing has been a significant contributor to the growth
of the prison population. In 1980, there were 40,000 people in prison or
jail for drug offenses. Today, we have 450,000, many of them as a result
of mandatory sentencing,” said Marc Mauer of the Sentencing Project, a
Washington think-tank advocating alternatives to mass incarceration.
But Gingray said mandatory sentences were a key part of the bill. “With
mandatory sentencing, law enforcement will gain leverage over lower
level gang members — leverage that will put pressure on a gang member to
'roll over' on their leadership,” he said.
Massachusetts Democrat James McGovern complained that the Republican
majority refused to allow debate on 16 Democratic amendments. He called
the law “bad policy wrapped in a bad bill” that would do nothing to
address gang violence while adding unjustifiable punishments to the
penal code.
11 May 2005
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=politicsNews&storyID=8461696
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