Pubdate: Wed, 05 Dec 2007
Source: Asbury Park Press (NJ)
Copyright: 2007 Asbury Park Press
Contact:  http://www.app.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/26
Author: Michael Rispoli

ANOTHER PANEL SAYS DRUG-FREE SCHOOL ZONES SHOULD SHRINK

TRENTON - New Jersey's current drug-free school zones  are ineffective
and should be reduced in size and  require stiffer penalties for
offenders, said a panel  advising Gov. Jon S. Corzine is a report
released  Tuesday.

Corzine's Task Force on Sentencing and Corrections  recommended
reducing drug-free school zones and other  drug-free zones from 1,000
feet of public property to  200 feet while upgrading drug-free zone
violations from  third-to second-degree offenses.

The report said the two-decade old law had unintended  consequences
that "diffused" the impact of the law.  Mainly, the report said, the
large number of schools  and public properties in urban areas created
large  portions in cities falling into these zones.

"For this reason, the current zone law does not  effectively deter
drug activities in urban centers and  the legislative purpose -- to
create a safe haven for  children around schools -- is thwarted," said
the  report.

Corzine asked the committee in October, when he  announced an
anti-crime initiative, to review proposals  set forth by the state
Commission to Review Criminal  Sentencing, which in 2005 reported
similar findings and  made similar recommendations.

Both reports support expanding drug court eligibility  for nonviolent
offenders, as well, because those  receiving treatment have shown
lower recidivism rates  than those released without treatment.

Corzine told reporters at a separate event Tuesday he  "absolutely"
supports the recommendations.

"I think it is consistent with recommendations of other  thoughtful
folks that are involved in challenging the  crime issue and how we
deal with the repetitive nature  of incarceration," Corzine said.

Upgrading drug-free zone violations to second-degree  crimes,
punishable by five to 10 years in prison and  fines up to $150,000,
would be done in the hope of  creating a greater deterrent effect.
Third-degree  crimes carry penalties of three to five years in prison
and fines up to $15,000.

Attorney General Anne Milgram said these changes in the  law would
"toughen penalties for those who peddle drugs  near our schools, which
was the original intent of the  legislation -- to get the drug dealers
away from our  children."

Another unintended consequence of the drug-free zones  has been
creating racial disparity in the main  offenders. Minorities make up
96 percent of those in  prison for school zone offenses, the report
said.

All of New Jersey's county prosecutors supported the  findings, said
Ronald Casella, president of the County  Prosecutors Association of
New Jersey, who said  amending the law is about treating all citizens
equally.

"Essentially, your urban dwellers are being treated  differently than
people who lived in the suburbs and  the rural areas because there
wasn't the same  concentration," said Casella, the Cumberland County
prosecutor.
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