Legislation

Former federal prosecutors push for vote on criminal justice reform

A group of former federal prosecutors and government officials are calling on Senate leaders to bring Sen. Chuck Grassley’s (R-Iowa) criminal justice reform bill to the floor for a vote.

“We endorse this bill because it makes some of the most needed improvements to the front and back ends of the federal criminal justice system,” the group said in a letter to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-N.V.). 

{mosads}Grassley’s bill, which has 28 co-sponsors including 13 Republicans, would target mandatory minimum sentences to high-level drug traffickers and violent criminals. It would also give prosecutors new tools to target violent criminals with new penalties.

The letter was signed by 67 people, including former FBI directors Louis Freeh and William Sessions; former U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey, who served under President George W Bush; and several former U.S. attorneys and federal judges.

It follows a separate letter from 40 former federal law enforcement officials that expressed concerns about the bill’s changes to mandatory sentences for certain firearm offenses and armed career criminals.

The letter from the prosecutors casts the changes as moving sentencing reform in a positive direction, and emphasizes the fact that it will not eliminate all mandatory minimum sentences.

“And it is important to note that applying these reforms retroactively will not eliminate all mandatory minimum sentences these offenders are subject to, or any additional penalties the judges previously imposed,” the letter said. 

Senate leadership has not said when it plans to bring its bill to the floor for a vote, but Majority Whip John Cornyn (R-Texas) said a vote is likely in early 2016. 
 
In October, Cornyn talked to McConnell about the possibility of moving criminal justice reform. 
 
“Several of us made a pitch to him that if he wants a good bipartisan bill that the president will sign, that’s a good candidate,” he told reporters at the time.

The letter comes a week after Obama’s State of the Union address, in which he said he hoped to work with House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Ohio) on criminal justice reform legislation. A similar sentencing reform bill is also waiting for a floor vote in House.