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Border Justice? Sentencing Federal Narcotics Offenders in Southwest Border Districts: A Focus on Citizenship Status

NCJ Number
234323
Journal
Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice Volume: 27 Issue: 1 Dated: February 2011 Pages: 43-62
Author(s)
Richard D. Hartley; Luisa F. Armendariz
Date Published
February 2011
Length
20 pages
Annotation
This study examined judicial sentencing practices for Federal narcotics offenders.
Abstract
The war on drugs has largely been waged in the Southwestern border region of the United States. Five Federal border districts (California South, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas West, and Texas South) alone are responsible for roughly one quarter of Federal narcotics prosecutions annually. Narcotics cases make up roughly 30 percent of the Federal criminal caseload each year, and the number of Hispanic and noncitizen defendants prosecuted in U.S. Federal courts has risen steadily over the past two decades. In 1991, noncitizens comprised about 23 percent of persons prosecuted in Federal courts; by 2009, nearly 45 percent of those prosecuted were noncitizens. This study examined judicial sentencing practices for Federal narcotics offenders in these five Southwestern border districts to explore the effect of citizenship status on sentence length. The authors also partition their analysis by district to enable assessment of variation in sentencing practices across these Federal border districts. (Published Abstract)