Pubdate: Fri, 26 May 2000 Source: Birmingham News (AL) Copyright: 2000 The Birmingham News Contact: 2200 4th Avenue North, Birmingham AL 35203 Fax: (205) 325-2283 Website: http://www.al.com/bhamnews/bham.html Forum: http://www.al.com/forums/ Author: Stan Bailey SEE SAYS MOORE EASY ON DRUG DEALERS MONTGOMERY - Justice Harold See took off the kid gloves Thursday in his fight for the Republican nomination for chief justice, accusing Etowah County Circuit Judge Roy Moore of being soft on crime. New radio and TV spots sponsored by the See campaign said "Moore let convicted drug dealers off with reduced sentences or probation - at least 40 times." In the TV version, as the announcer spoke, a list of the case numbers from Moore's court scrolled across the screen. Asked to back up See's claims about Moore's handling of drug cases, campaign spokeswoman Kelly McCullough provided summaries of 41 cases from Moore's court. Phillip Jauregui, Moore's campaign manager, hadn't heard See's radio and TV spots but when told of their content called them "a sad, desperate move by a campaign that is losing. And they are losing. "One minute Harold See is praising Moore as the Ten Commandments judge and praying with him on the Capitol steps on the National Day of Prayer, and the next minute he is attacking him," Jauregui said. In one court case cited by the See campaign, Joann Miller Black was convicted of trafficking in cocaine and was sentenced by another judge to 10 years in prison and five years on probation. According to the summary, she was released after one year, then violated probation. Her probation officer asked Moore, who had taken over supervision of her case, to revoke her probation. "Judge Moore denied this request and extended Black's probation and changed it to unsupervised probation," See's campaign summary stated. Moore later waived a fine that the previous judge had imposed and ordered the woman to perform community service instead, and when she refused to perform community service Moore again did not revoke her probation, the summary stated. Moore's staff, provided a copy of the case summary late Thursday, had no immediate comment. See's ads also touted See's "proven record of making criminals pay for their crimes and fighting against technicalities that would let criminals off." Ms. McCullough cited specific cases from the Supreme Court. In one, five justices overturned the capital murder conviction of Nathaniel Scroggins because the district attorney offered written testimony from a witness instead of live testimony. See and three other justices dissented. See wrote that the majority's ruling was "a dramatic departure" from what the U.S. Supreme Court says the Constitution requires in such cases. News staff writer Rose Livingston contributed to this story. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck