Pubdate: Sat, 15 Jun 2002 Source: Daily Gazette (NY) Copyright: 2002 The Gazette Newspapers Contact: http://www.dailygazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/105 PASS PATAKI DRUG LAW Reform of the so-called Rockefeller drug laws is one of those political issues that seems never to go away in New York state. Even though more or less everybody is in favor of some kind of reform, it never (so far) comes to pass. Even the New York State District Attorneys Association is in favor of reforming the law to give judges more discretion in sentencing A1 drug felons, who now get 15 years to life. In rare cases, low-level "mules" might end up being sentenced to such a term, which almost everyone agrees would be excessive. The Association also calls for "statewide availability of drug treatment" as a potential alternative to incarceration. However, as the Association points out, some proponents of reform have greatly exaggerated the harshness of the Rockefeller laws. And radically reforming them, as the Assembly bill would do, would reduce DAs' leverage against both drug dealers and violent criminals, making it harder to convict them. While the Association is not prepared to endorse the reforms proposed by Gov. George Pataki and passed by the Senate, saying they go too far, it greatly prefers them to the Assembly bill. Schenectady County District Attorney Bob Carney, a Democrat who is former president of the statewide Association, says the judicial discretion provisions of the Pataki bill might not have as much impact upstate as in New York City, where judges tend to be more liberal. The Assembly should settle for something rather than nothing, and pass the Senate bill. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth