Pubdate: Fri, 08 Mar 2002 Source: News Journal (DE) Copyright: 2002 The News Journal Contact: http://www.delawareonline.com/newsjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/822 Author: Mary Allen STATE'S ATTORNEY GENERAL PROPOSES SENTENCING REFORMS Attorney General Wants To Keep Violent Felons Behind Bars Longer Attorney General M. Jane Brady unveiled eight sentencing reform ideas Thursday she said are designed to ensure the state's most violent felons occupy its prison cells. The initiatives range from increasing minimum sentences for violent felons who possess firearms to lowering minimum sentences in some drug possession cases. "It targets the most violent and repetitive offenders," Brady said at her office in Wilmington. "I think we should decide what the sentences should be based on the risk people present to the public." She said her plan coincides with a heightened public awareness of gun violence in Delaware. There were 16 shootings in Wilmington in February, according to city police. Last year nearly 70 percent of Wilmington shooting victims had criminal records, police said. Reform advocates said they liked proposals that would bring shorter prison terms to low-level drug offenders. But a less-warm reception was given to her plan to increase the minimum sentence from one year to three years for people who illegally possess a firearm after a prior violent felony conviction. Brady also proposed raising the minimum sentence to five years for firearm offenders who have two or more prior violent felony convictions. Her other reform ideas would: * Permit judges to sentence serious sex offenders to a lifetime of probation in addition to prison. * Decrease from 5 to 3 grams the heroin-possession weight needed to qualify for a drug trafficking charge. * Give judges discretion to suspend some or all mandatory sentences for first-time offenders who possess small drug quantities. * Reduce the minimum prison sentence from 15 to five years in some cases of drug possession with intent to deliver. * Force judges to impose home-confinement terms instead of prison for people convicted of driving with a suspended license or driving after judgment prohibited. Brady would exempt cases involving deaths, injuries or intoxication. * Authorize judges to order prison terms be served without good time or early-release credits. * Give the Department of Correction authority to decide what level of probation supervision is appropriate for offenders without filing legal papers and getting a court review. Thomas P. Eichler, executive coordinator of Stand Up for What's Right and Just, applauded Brady's proposals to bring shorter prison terms in nonviolent, low-level drug dealing crimes. His Delaware group is seeking reforms to the criminal justice system. But Eichler said the group regrets Brady's decision to seek longer minimum sentences for violent felons who possess firearms. The law already allows judges to sentence those offenders up to a maximum of eight years. "With the nationally acclaimed judiciary we have, why handcuff them in situations like this? We just don't think that's good public policy," Eichler said. Brady, a Republican, will seek re-election this fall. Former U.S. Attorney Carl Schnee, who plans to challenge her, said Thursday he agrees in theory that firearm offenses merit tough penalties and people with simple driving offenses should not take up prison space. Schnee said he had not yet seen Brady's written proposals, and his reactions were based on a summary provided by a reporter. He questioned whether some of the ideas are workable. For example, giving serious sex offenders lifetime probation could add considerably to Delaware probation officers' caseloads, he said. "There's always a question of whether the state is willing to fund extra expenses that could be associated with this," he said. Sentencing reform has been gaining momentum nationally in recent years, according to The Sentencing Project, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit that promotes alternative sentencing ideas and decreased reliance on prisons. Fiscal troubles, a national decrease in crime and solid alternative sentencing models, such as drug courts that divert offenders to treatment, have shifted national attitudes toward reform, said Marc Mauer, assistant director of organization. Four states revised their mandatory or truth-in-sentencing laws last year, and seven others passed legislation to ease prison overcrowding, according to a report Mauer co-authored last month. "It doesn't seem as politically risky as it once was," he said of reform ideas. Brady said her proposals were not conceived to ease continued prison overcrowding, though they may free up some beds. Gander Hill prison, for example, was 593 inmates over its 1,180 capacity Thursday, a prison spokeswoman said. Brady will announce the rest of her legislative package Monday. She said she is talking with state lawmakers, searching for someone to sponsor her bills. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel