Pubdate: Thu, 12 Aug 2004 Source: Pacific Daily News (Guam) Copyright: 2004 Pacific Daily News Contact: http://www.guampdn.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.guampdn.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1122 Author: Bryan Wiser Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n1124/a09.html WHERE IS THE SO-CALLED 'SAFETY VALVE' MEASURE? My brother was arrested on a first-time drug offense in March of 1996. He received a 188-month sentence, when the Assistant U.S. Attorney told him if he made him waste his time and take him to trial, he would make sure my brother got more prison time than the other three defendants in the case, including the kingpin who sold to my brother. Mandatory minimums are set up as a jobs program for the government and to help politicians get elected. They also provide slave labor to the Bureau of Prisons to make goods for the government and put private companies out of business, at a cost of over $25,000 a year for each nonviolent inmate like my brother. (U.S. Attorney for Guam and the CNMI Leonardo) Rapadas ignores the fact that they routinely give the best plea bargains to the most hardened criminals to keep the money train going and to keep the most docile persons in prison. If you go to a federal prison, the guards don't carry a weapon. If Rapadas was telling the truth that they were keeping violent offenders off the street, don't you think the keepers of all these violent criminals would carry weapons? On the safety valve issue, you might check and see how many persons convicted it has been applied to. I haven't heard of one. It seems like my brother, a first-time offender, a good father, would have been eligible, but that's just something to make them look fair and honest when the opposite is true. Bryan Wiser Mesquite, Texas - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake