It’s become so imbalanced, that they’re almost monarchs within the courtroom with little fear of reprimand for any wrongdoing whatsoever. Prosecutors determine bail, the charge, the conviction (almost always via a coerced plea bargain), and the sentence.
The Rockefeller Drug Laws
Prosecutors gained a lot of power beginning with the Rockefeller Drug Laws, passed in 1973 in the state of New York, where Nelson Rockefeller was Governor.He signed the bill into law on March 8, 1973. These laws mandated harsh sentences for possession of drugs, and in some cases, mandatory minimum sentences. Individuals caught selling 2 ounces of drugs (even marijuana) would receive a mandatory 15 years in prison.
This also resulted in the modern-day “650-Lifer Law”, which says that one convicted of selling over 650 grams (about 23 ounces) of cocaine or any hard opiate shall be sentenced to life without parole. The impetus for the enacting of these laws can almost assuredly be traced back to Richard Nixon, who introduced the idea of “Tough on Crime” along with stiff drug sentencing.
Since Rockefeller had presidential aspirations, he viewed the enacting of these laws would boost his national public profile.
But the real boon for prosecutors came in the 1980’s, when Tough on Crime was finally stated in the Presidential State of the Union address, thus giving politicians a platform to run on.
The Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984
On October 12, 1984, Ronald Reagan signed the bipartisan-supported Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984 into law. The bill was sponsored by Senator Strom Thurmond of South Carolina. There were many things included in this bill that would have long-term consequences still in place today, including (but not limited to):- The Sentencing Reform Act
- The U.S. Sentencing Commission
- The Bail Reform Act
All of the provisions that came from the Comprehensive Crime Control Act, as well as vestigial effects from the Rockefeller Drug Laws are what led to America's prison epidemic.
We must enact legislation that severely limits the powers of the prosecutor, and that restores the checks and balances sorely lacking in America's criminal justice system.