Source: Irish Times (Ireland) Contact: Sat, 11 Apr 1998 SENTENCES FOR DRUG TRAFFICKING Sir, - I believe the proposal of the Minister for Justice to legislate for a mandatory sentence of 10 years for those who traffic in drugs worth over #10,000 is a mistake. It may be that some trafficking offences indeed warrant a sentence of 10 years; some may warrant an even longer one; but I have no doubt that some will warrant a sentence of much less. Let me give a hypothetical example of the latter. A young man or woman with no involvement whatever with drugs is approached at an airport, perhaps in Spain or England, and offered #1,000 to carry a bag and hand it over to someone at Dublin Airport. This young person, for one reason or another, is tempted, is caught at Dublin Airport with the bag containing #20,000 worth of given the mandatory sentence of 10 years. This young offender has made a bad mistake. Their situation is such that the money has tempted them without fully realising the implications for others of what they have done. Yes, of course the law must punish this person. But 10 years? After a year or two in prison many such young people will have learned their lesson and will be unlikely to offend again. Surely it is not more than just to leave sentencing to judges who, from years of experience in the courts dealing with offenders, will be able to discern between the kind of case mentioned above and the hardened full-time dealer who is getting rich from dealing in drugs. Prison is supposed to be about rehabilitation as well as punishment. I believe that a 10-year sentence in such cases as I quote above is more likely to destroy offenders than to rehabilitate them. - - Yours, etc., (Rev) PATRICK SEMPLE, Church of Ireland Chaplain, Mountjoy Prison, Dublin.