Pubdate: Sat, 03 Jun 2000 Source: Austin American-Statesman (TX) Copyright: 2000 Austin American-Statesman Contact: P. O. Box 670 Austin, Texas 78767 Fax: 512-445-3679 Website: http://www.austin360.com/statesman/editions/today/ Author: Robert Tanner, Associated Press Writer VOTERS DEBATE HARSH DRUG SENTENCES Are harsh sentences for all drug offenders wise? Voters in at least two states will decide that this fall, even as Congress and many state legislatures debate the issue. Billionaire philanthropist George Soros, who bankrolled successful ballot drives for legalizing medical marijuana, is financing the latest initiatives. In California and Massachusetts, voters are being asked to create new laws that would require the option of treatment alternatives, not mandatory sentences. Massachusetts also would place stricter controls on law enforcement's ability to seize cash and property during drug arrests. ``What we're trying to do is restore a measure of the kind of discretion and judgment that judges used to have ... to render a just result, not just a harsh result,'' said Carl Valvo, a Massachusetts attorney who drafted that state's initiative. If voters agree, and advocates claim polls show they will, more alternatives for drug offenders will spread across the country, said Ethan Nadelmann, a policy adviser to Soros. ``The public is ahead of the politicians when it comes to drug policy issues.'' The question of easing tough sentences has already come before lawmakers, with support for reform not just from liberals but moderate Republicans, such as Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson and New York Gov. George Pataki. Pataki unsuccessfully sought changes in New York's two-decade-old Rockefeller laws, the first of the nation's sweeping anti-drug laws. Despite such talk, few laws have been changed. But now, voters will weigh in. That worries some law enforcement officials, who say drug policy is too complex to leave to billboards and TV ads. Prosecutors, like Martha Coakley in Massachusetts, acknowledge that initiative supporters have a sympathetic argument. ``People want rehabilitation,'' said Coakley, Middlesex County District Attorney. But ``it will really give a free pass, a get-out-of-jail-free card, for people in the business of selling drugs.'' Coakley paints a picture of drug dealers who, if the initiative passes, could repeatedly avoid conviction. They might claim to be drug dependent and go to treatment, even if caught selling 28 grams of cocaine. Now, that brings a mandatory five-year sentence. In California, White House drug czar Barry McCaffrey fretted that removing the threat of prison time would undermine rehabilitation efforts. ``If you think you can treat drug addicts without holding them accountable, you obviously don't understand the nature of the addiction,'' McCaffrey told state judges on Friday. Supporters in Massachusetts and California disputed those characterizations. In Massachusetts, judges could still send first-time offenders to prison, Valvo said. The California organization said the law would enhance the state's drug court program, not damage it. Nationally, several studies found that 25 percent of the nation's prison and jail inmates--now nearly 2 million--are behind bars for drug convictions. However, 3 percent of all prisoners were imprisoned on just drug possession charges, according to the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University. A California government study estimated that, if the initiative passed, as many as 37,000 inmates could avoid prison or jail terms. California does not have mandatory sentences, but its 3-strikes-you're-out law can mean mandatory time for a drug crime if it follows earlier convictions. This year's initiatives are not the nation's first. In 1996, Arizona voters agreed to a law that sentences nonviolent, first- and second-time drug offenders to treatment rather than prison. It allows doctors to prescribe marijuana and some other drugs for the severely ill. A state Supreme Court study found Arizona's drug offender program saved taxpayers more than $2.56 million, and that 78 percent of the participants later tested drug-free. Some prosecutors criticized the study for including first-time offenders who would never have been imprisoned. Soros is joined in his support for the initiatives by Ohio insurance executive Peter Lewis and John Sperling, founder of the University of Phoenix, a for-profit college program in 30 states. Together, they are expected to spend up to $6 million on these and related drug policy efforts, Soros adviser Nadelmann said. In recent years, they've been successful on ballot initiatives legalizing marijuana for medical purposes. Twelve states approved. In Oregon and Utah, Soros-funded efforts are seeking to put just the forfeiture question before voters. The money creates too much incentive to focus on drug busts at the expense of other prosecutions, supporters say. Congress recently reformed federal forfeiture law. California's alternative-sentencing initiative was certified last week. Massachusett's initiative gathered enough signatures for the ballot but has yet to win final certification. An unrelated ballot measure in Oregon would overturn the state's 1994 mandatory-minimum law, but that would not affect drug offenses. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea