😵 Bruh… Is That Even Legal?
Yes. In the U.S., you can get decades behind bars for selling drugs—longer than some people get for rape. It sounds backwards, but it’s baked into the law. Let’s unpack how this loophole happened, and why it still exists.
⚖️ The Numbers Don’t Lie
According to multiple studies and court data:
- Federal drug offenders often serve 10–15 years under mandatory minimums.
- Meanwhile, the average sentence served for rape is about 9.8 years.
- Some drug offenders—even nonviolent ones—have served 40+ years, while certain convicted rapists have walked free in under 5.
Sources:
🧨 Where This Loophole Began

The U.S. launched the “War on Drugs” in the 1980s, and it came with mandatory minimums:
- Sell 5g of crack cocaine? Boom—5 years minimum.
- Carry a gun while selling weed? Add 25 years.
- Get caught a second time? Even longer.
Meanwhile, no such mandatory minimums were introduced for rape or sexual assault.
This created a system where drug sentencing is fixed and harsh, but rape sentencing is flexible and inconsistent.
🔥 Real WTF Examples
- Weldon Angelos, a first-time offender, got 55 years for selling marijuana with a gun nearby. He didn’t use it. He was later released, but only after massive public pressure. (Wikipedia)
- In contrast, Brock Turner, a Stanford student convicted of sexually assaulting an unconscious woman behind a dumpster, got 6 months. He served 3.
- Even large-scale dealers can face more time than child molesters, especially under federal laws.
🧑🏿🤝🧑🏼 Race + Class = More Years
Black and brown people are disproportionately charged and sentenced for drug crimes:
- 80s & 90s: Crack cocaine (used more in Black communities) punished 100x worse than powder cocaine.
- Even today, drug arrests remain racially skewed despite similar usage rates across races.
Rich white offenders? More likely to get treatment, probation, or a plea deal.
🧠 Why This Still Happens
- Mandatory minimum laws handcuff judges.
- Prosecutors stack charges to force plea deals.
- Sexual violence cases are often undercharged, hard to prosecute, or settled quietly.
- Politics reward being “tough on crime”—but mainly for drugs.
📉 Bottom Line Loophole
America punishes drug dealers more than rapists because of a perfect storm of:
- Mandatory minimums
- Racial bias
- Political fearmongering
- Prosecutorial power
If you’re Black, poor, or unlucky—you might serve a life sentence for selling a substance someone else is legally buying in another state.
Meanwhile, your rapist? Might already be out.
🎯 Final Bruh Take
This isn’t just broken—it’s engineered to be. It’s not about what’s worse, it’s about what’s easier to prosecute. And drugs are easy. Rapists? Not so much.
So yeah, legally… drug dealers often get it worse. That’s the loophole.