Pubdate: Sun, 28 Apr 2002 Source: Daily Herald (IL) Copyright: 2002 The Daily Herald Company Contact: http://www.dailyherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/107 Author: Richard A. Devine NO EARLY RELEASE OF DRUG OFFENDERS Gov. George Ryan has proposed freeing 4,500 prison inmates before their sentences have run to balance the state budget. That is 4,500 people who were arrested by the police for either possessing or dealing drugs, many of whom were prosecuted by my assistant state's attorneys. Court records show it takes an average of nine arrests before a defendant is actually sentenced to prison. That is nine times that a police officer has arrested a suspect and nine times that assistant state's attorneys prosecuted the cases. In each of these 4,500 cases, a judge has looked at the evidence, the amount of drugs involved and the criminal record of the defendant before deciding to send the defendant to prison. To send these legally convicted and sentenced inmates back to their community - and I know a high percentage of these inmates are from Cook County - is not only reprehensible, but also illegal. As the chief law enforcement officer of Cook County and the president of the Illinois State's Attorneys Association, I hope the governor's threat is an empty one. We have enough dealers and users on our streets without the governor circumventing the judiciary by unleashing a small army of drug offenders on our communities. Richard A. Devine Cook County State's Attorney Chicago - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens