The 1980’s became the turning point for legislative reform on national drug policy. The Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986(Pub L. 99-570) created a distinction between sentencing for offenders in possession of powder cocaine and crack cocaine. Fifty grams of crack guaranteed a minimum of ten years. Five hundred grams equaled five years. In the 1980’s widespread drug use was associated with street crime Sentencing for crack and cocaine has become controversial because of racial injustice. African American males as well as Latino’s would receive a higher sentenced opposed to a white man who committed the same crime. The Drug Policy Alliance states that African Americans only make up 14% of drug use, opposed to 37% arrested for drug offenses. The purpose of this paper is to analyze the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986(Pub L.99-570); this includes policy formulation and adoption, a literature review and …show more content…
There were 12 councils and four sub-boards of trustees required in defining the bill. There were a couple of advisory groups that didn 't appear to care about the need for a medication law, yet; the most prominently intrigued was the House Vitality and Trade Council. At first glance this does not appear like a board of trustees that requires contribution on medication manhandle, notwithstanding that it incorporates numerous features of the legislature, for example, oversight, wellbeing, the economy, and obviously exchange. That cements the motivation behind why the bill was presented by Wright – an excessive number of medication arrangements experiencing the outskirt from Texas and Mexico. A moment advisory group to note was the House Training and Work board. President Reagan when marking this bill into law created an impression to the way that Instruction would get $200 million dollars (of the $1.7 billion) for medication