Pubdate: Fri, 12 Jul 2002 Source: Times-Picayune, The (LA) Copyright: 2002 The Times-Picayune Contact: http://www.nola.com/t-p/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/848 Author: Gwen Filosa, Staff writer/The Times-Picayune DA HOPEFULS LEARN GOOD, BAD, UGLY Connick's Successor Faces Many Hurdles Only one person can take over Harry Connick's office, but on Thursday five likely candidates for Orleans Parish district attorney took a crash course on the business of criminal prosecutions from an administration that's been in place for nearly 30 years. High employee turnover, low pay, staggering caseloads and an equally strapped Police Department were just a few of the obstacles Connick and his team of division heads discussed in a closed-door session with those who want the city's top criminal justice job. The briefing began at 8 a.m. and ran until about 1 p.m. Connick announced in March that he wouldn't seek a sixth term, leaving the race wide open for a changing of the guard that New Orleans hasn't seen since Connick knocked Jim Garrison out of the incumbent's chair in a close 1973 election. The qualifying date is in August, with the primary set for Oct. 5. But the political fund-raising and jockeying has been months in the making. Connick said Thursday he plans to endorse someone at a later date and closely watch the race that will produce his successor. Thursday's event drew Civil District Court Clerk Dale Atkins, lawyer James Gray, former U.S. Attorney Eddie Jordan and defense lawyer Gary Wainwright to the DA's office on South White Street. Michael Darnell, vice president and attorney for the Regional Transit Authority, also attended. Darnell said he is waiting to announce his candidacy. Absent was former Judge Morris Reed, a perennial candidate and Connick foe, who is likely to run for the office yet again. The DA's office said Reed showed no interest in attending. But through his wife, Hazel, Reed released a statement saying he wasn't invited -- but even if he had been, he wouldn't have come. From the white tablecloths and printed name cards to the refreshment spread, the mood was gracious and the candidates were groomed for the television cameras. They showed no apprehension of taking over an office riddled with staffing woes and a staggering caseload. "The job will be tough and difficult but not impossible," Atkins said during a midday news conference that followed the briefing. The only contrary words came from Wainwright, who used his time at the microphone to deride the criminal prosecution of marijuana users, which he said wastes "millions" of Louisiana tax dollars and police officers' time. "Catching people after they've committed horrible crimes does not make us safer in our homes," said Wainwright, who is facing a charge of possession of marijuana from arrest during a Carnival parade. No one else commented on the idea of decriminalizing marijuana. In a thick plastic binder provided to each candidate, the office laid out its daily operations and protocol. The 90-page outline also included a number of undesirable statistics. For instance, prospective candidates learned that the office lost two thirds of its staff to turnover last year. The screening division alone, which reviews cases first, lost 14 of its 16 assistant district attorneys. Prosecutors said money is one problem, because their starting pay is about $31,000 a year, about half of what Connick said local first-year lawyers earn in the private sector. The workload is another burden. In 2001, the 32 lawyers in the trial division handled 364 jury trials, 554 judge trials and more than 4,300 guilty pleas. At the end of the year, 100 homicide defendants awaited trial. Several candidates vowed to seek federal and state money for the office to beef up salaries for starters. Gray, who finished third in the 1996 primary and endorsed Connick in the runoff against Reed, said it's a given that whoever becomes DA will try to get as much money as possible for the office, but added that cash won't solve every problem. The new DA must convince city residents that prosecutors truly care about them, he said. "We have to convince people this system is a system working for their benefit," Gray said. "That's not an easy job. We're going to have to say it and then act on it." In addition to the money trail, the candidates appeared to agree that the relationship between the Police Department and the DA's office needs strengthening. "The two are joined at the hip," said Jordan, who led successful federal prosecutions against Gov. Edwin Edwards and the "7th Ward Soldiers" drug ring. "So they have to have a better working relationship." Protecting trial witnesses was another universal concern. The office listed uncooperative witnesses as a key problem, saying many people have been too scared to testify in violent cases, or else they disappear before a case reaches prosecution. "We've got to regain our streets," Darnell said. "We've got to let the criminal element know they can't retaliate against our witnesses." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake