Pubdate: Thu, 11 Jul 2002 Source: Oakland Press, The (MI) Copyright: 2002 The Oakland Press Contact: http://www.zwire.com/site/news.asp?brd=982 Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2114 Author: John Wisely DRUG INITIATIVE ALMOST ON BALLOT An amendment to the Michigan Constitution that would overhaul state drug laws is one step closer to appearing on the November ballot. Representatives of the Michigan Drug Reform Initiative said they submitted 454,584 signatures to the Secretary of State Bureau of Elections on Friday. The group needs about 302,000 valid signatures to qualify for the ballot. "We're very confident," said Dave Fratello, a spokesman for the initiative. "We do (signature) validation checks along the way, and it was very high in Michigan, about 75 percent. With these signatures, we would be with a 65 percent rate." Signatures can be invalidated for a variety of reasons. Petition drives typically turn in additional signatures to make up for any that are found to be invalid. Elizabeth Boyd, spokeswoman for Michigan Secretary of State Candice Miller said the Bureau of Elections will review the signatures to validate them. "They'll make a recommendation to the state Board of Canvassers, who will decide if it goes on the ballot," Boyd said. The proposal would: * Eliminate mandatory minimum sentences in drug crimes, except for people convicted of making a net profit of $500,000 selling drugs. * Establish an independent commission to set sentencing guidelines for users and low-level dealers. * Allow resentencing for convicts serving mandatory sentences. * Require drug treatment for anyone caught with drugs for personal use and allow the defendant to choose treatment over prosecution. * Require the state to spend at least $18 million per year on drug treatment. (Michigan currently spends about $150 million per year on treatment, according to state drug czar Craig Yaldoo.) Fratello said the measure shifts the focus of the drug war away from incarceration and toward drug treatment. Opponents call it a Trojan horse that decriminalizes drugs. They say it eliminates penalties for drug possession and gives drug dealers a pass. Prosecutors say it is impossible to prove how much net profit a drug dealer makes because they don't keep financial statements and they could deduct expenses like hitmen and bribes. The $500,000 limit is indexed for inflation, under the proposal. "How do you prove that someone made a net profit of $500,000 or more?" asked Novi district Judge Brian McKenzie, an outspoken opponent of the measure. "Why do drug dealers get their crimes indexed for inflation. No other financial crime in Michigan is indexed for inflation." Fratello acknowledges his organization paid workers to collect the signatures and will spend more on a statewide campaign in the fall to get the measure approved. But he said polling conducted by backers of the proposal show Michigan voters approve its goals. McKenzie said he worries that an advertising blitz paid for by wealthy backers of the initiative could prove successful. "I think 30-second commercials can overwhelm the truth," McKenzie said. "They tell people that it will increase penalties for drug dealers and provide treatment. It does neither. They don't tell people that possession of heroin, crack and ecstasy will now be 60-day misdemeanors." McKenzie said if the measure is approved, teens caught with crack cocaine will face a lighter penalty than those caught with tobacco. "What kind of message does that send to kids?" McKenzie asked. Fratello said polling conducted in November showed Michigan residents approve the goals of the measure. "We don't even start a campaign if the poll numbers aren't above 60 percent," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens