Pubdate: Sat, 28 Mar 2009
Source: Buffalo News (NY)
Copyright: 2009 The Buffalo News
Contact:  http://www.buffalonews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/61
Author: Gene Warner, News Staff Reporter
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?140 (Rockefeller Drug Laws)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

OPPONENTS SAY DRUG LAWS WERE CHANGED IN SECRET

The battle lines have been drawn. Let the political war over the
dismantling of the Rockefeller Drug Laws begin.

A political firestorm ignited across the state on Friday, starting
with Gov. David A. Paterson and Democratic legislative leaders
announcing an agreement to make "sweeping changes" in the Rockefeller
Drug Laws, during a late-morning news conference in Albany.

Not long after those cameras were turned off, Republican legislators
and law enforcement officials held their own news briefings to counter
the Democrats' claims and cry foul over the way the agreement was
hammered out in secret and put into the state budget.

The Rockefeller Drug Laws, enacted in 1973, mandate harsh prison terms
even for many nonviolent drug offenders and take some discretion away
from judges at sentencing.

The agreement between Paterson and his fellow Democratic leaders in
the Assembly and State Senate would shift the emphasis, for nonviolent
drug users, from jail time to treatment.

"Drug abuse is an illness," the governor said. "More and more, we're
discovering that it's a treatable illness."

Paterson, along with Senate Majority Leader Malcolm A. Smith and
Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, claimed the agreement could save $250
million for the state.

They also say the pact would provide judges with the sentencing
discretion they need and increase the penalties where they should be
stiffened -- in dealing with drug "kingpins" and dealers who sell to
children.

Nonsense, cried the Republican legislators and their friends in law
enforcement.

"I don't see where this is going to save the state a cent," Sen. Dale
M. Volker, R-Depew, said during an early afternoon news conference in
the Mahoney State Office Building.

The agreement hammered out by the Democratic leaders Thursday night
would set up what amounts to a "jail break," putting prisoners on the
street and hoping they get treatment, the veteran senator said.

"This is a bill that will create havoc not only in the streets of New
York City and Buffalo, but it will spread to the suburbs," Volker added.

Volker -- joined at the news conference by Assembly members Jane L.
Corwin and Jack F. Quinn III, Sen. George D. Maziarz and Erie County
Sheriff Timothy B. Howard-- also objected on political grounds.

"They put it in the budget for one reason, and one reason only," Quinn
said. "They know that's the only way they can get it passed."

Volker, Maziarz and others also pointed out that the Rockefeller Drug
Laws have been changed numerous times since their passage in 1973,
with perhaps the greatest changes enacted in 2004.

Earlier, one key statistic jumped out from the Democratic leaders'
35-minute news conference, available across the state via webcast:

It costs $45,000 a year to house a low-level, nonviolent drug offender
in state prison. Multiply that figure by the 13,000 such offenders
imprisoned across the state, and you get a figure of $585 million a
year.

The Democratic leaders also plan to use some federal stimulus money to
fund many of the drug-treatment slots.

The agreement, announced amid the ongoing battle over a new state
budget, calls for several key reforms:

* For nonviolent drug users who are addicted and don't prey on
others, the state would opt for treatment, rather than mandated jail
time.

So judges would be allowed to send some addicted first-and second-time
drug offenders into approved alcohol and drug-treatment programs --
even over the objections of prosecutors.

* Gone would be the mandatory minimums for many drug offenses, a key
provision of the Rockefeller Drug Laws that tied the hands of judges
in many cases.

The agreement would eliminate mandatory state prison sentences for
first-time Class B felony drug offenders and second-time nonviolent
offenders. Those people could be sentenced to probation, including
drug treatment, or a local jail sentence.

* According to the agreement and Paterson's comments, hundreds of
nonviolent felons already imprisoned under the Rockefeller Drug Laws
would be able to apply for relief from their sentences.

* To counter any suspicion that the agreement is soft on the key
players in the drug world, the pact calls for a new drug "kingpin"
offense that targets those who prey on drug users.

"As for the kingpins, the individuals who profit from ruining the
lives of others, their [punishment] will be increased," the governor
said.

The agreement also calls for new crimes that would toughen the
sentences against those adults who sell drugs to children.

The Republicans may be in the minority in Albany, but they're vowing a
spirited fight here.

"I don't think it's over yet," Volker said. "We're going to do
everything we can to weaken [the agreement] and try to modify it, so
it doesn't kill the criminal-justice system." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake