Pubdate: Sat, 15 Mar 2008
Source: Miami Herald (FL)
Copyright: 2008 The Miami Herald
Contact:  http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262
Author: Marc Caputo

CRIST WANTS TO MAINTAIN DRUG PENALTIES

Gov. Charlie Crist Said He Doesn't Support Legislative Plans to Review
Whether to Lessen Penalties for Some Crimes Such As Non-Violent Drug
Possession

TALLAHASSEE - Though he has admitted to smoking marijuana, Gov.
Charlie Crist said he still favors Florida's tough drug laws and
doesn't support legislative plans to review whether to lessen
penalties for some crimes such as non-violent drug possession.

The state's prison population is expected to swell at year's end to a
record 100,000, about 20 percent of whom are non-violent drug
offenders convicted of crimes such as trafficking and simple possession.

And some legislators have wondered aloud and in private how the state
can afford to pay for it now that Florida's economy is sagging and
crime is rising It costs more than $19,000 a year to lock up an
inmate, not counting the millions it will cost to build two prisons
per year through 2013 to keep up with prison-population growth.

While no legislator has filed a bill to decriminalize drug laws
outright, the Senate and House are considering measures that allow
some inmates early and supervised work release, that establish a
commission to review mandatory-minimum prison sentences -- a legacy of
the drug war -- and that lessen penalties for driving with a suspended
license.

But Crist said he wants to keep the laws the way they are. "It's
important to make sure that we do what the first order of business is,
and that is to ensure domestic tranquility -- make sure that our
people are safe -- and that means locking up bad people," he said.

What about nonviolent drug offenders?

"I feel that our laws are good in Florida. They were thoughtfully put
in place. And I know there is a budget crunch. But I don't want to
sacrifice public safety," Crist said.

Plantation Democratic Rep. Perry Thurston said the Legislature is not
yet ready for decriminalization, but he noted his Republican
colleagues are slowly starting to realize that too many people are
being locked away and they're changing their minds about being tough
on certain crimes.

Tampa Sen. Victor Crist -- a Republican who's not related to the
governor and chairs the senate's criminal-justice appropriations
committee -- said locking up drug users costs society and the state
too much money, and it doesn't work.

"That's the old way; throw a drug addict in jail. But now we know
treatment works, it's better and it's cheaper," Sen. Crist said. "If
you're a violent criminal, you belong in a cell. If you're a drug
addict, you belong in a rehab program."

He said the Legislature is studying who's in prison and why --
something which can take time because prison records don't reflect the
type of drug or specifics of a crime for which someone is convicted.

Asked if marijuana-possession should be decriminalized, Sen. Crist
said: "The man or woman abusing drugs need to be in a program to
overcome their addiction. And the time has come to look at the prison
system and make sure this is appropriate."

While the state senator said he hasn't used illegal drugs, the
governor acknowledged he had. Asked if he ever used marijuana, Crist
said "Yeah."

"I've said many times, people make mistakes. And what I support about
the law is the deterrent effect," he said. "Having said that, I'm
also recommending about $28 million for substance-abuse [treatment],
to help people who might have an addiction or problem with a
substance. I think that's important to do as well. I think we have to
have balance."

Gov. Crist said he only used marijuana recreationally when he was
younger and long before public life and that he never used cocaine.

Did he inhale? "I did," he said.
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