Pubdate: Tue, 30 Apr 2002 Source: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (AR) Copyright: 2002 Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Inc. Contact: http://www.ardemgaz.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/25 Author: Michael Rowett WOULD-BE ATTORNEY GENERAL PROMOTES ALTERNATIVES FOR SOME DRUG OFFENDERS State Sen. Mike Beebe outlined Monday the top priorities he'd pursue as attorney general, including alternative sentencing for first-time nonviolent drug offenders and an emphasis on affirming lower-court criminal convictions. He discussed his priorities in response to questions from members of the University of Arkansas at Little Rock William H. Bowen School of Law chapter of the Young Democrats. Beebe, 55, of Searcy, a Democrat, is the only candidate for attorney general. He has been a state senator for two decades. He said that "because of my peculiar relationship with the Legislature, unlike probably any AG we've ever had" he thinks he "can be a little bolder on some issues" that the attorney general ought to take a lead on. On prisons, Beebe said, "We can't continue to build our way out of the criminal justice system. We can't continue to warehouse people for the sake of warehousing people, because, one, we can't afford it. Two, it's counter-productive, and, three, there are better ways to do it." Beebe said he doesn't "back up one iota" from his commitment to convict and punish violent offenders, but it makes sense to divert first-time nonviolent drug offenders from prison. This would free scarce prison space for more violent offenders and offer real hope of rehabilitating nonviolent offenders, he said. "First-time nonviolent drug users need to have other criminal sanctions besides just warehousing," Beebe said, saying that recidivism rates are low in cases in which drug courts impose alternative sentencing such as community service, fines and random drug testing on offenders who agree to plea guilty. "If you do the drugs, you don't go through another trial -- you've already been convicted -- you can always send them to Cummins or to Tucker," he said, referring to two state prisons. "Faced with the prospect and the possibility they have been caught, they are in trouble, they are going to jail, it turns a lot of them around," Beebe said. Using drug courts for these offenders represents "a more appropriate" punishment for the crime than jail time, he said. In response to a question on the state's continual backlog in payments to county jails for housing state prisoners, Beebe said lawmakers and the governor must do a better job of prioritizing funds for this. Most Arkansans don't realize that the attorney general's office is in charge of handling all appeals of criminal convictions to the state appellate courts. Exemplary work by police and prosecutors leading to a criminal conviction is all for naught unless the state persuades higher courts to affirm that conviction, Beebe said. "If the AG's office doesn't devote sufficient resources, sufficient personnel and sufficient time to the appellate process, then all that work's out of the window," he said. Beebe said his comments were in no way a negative reflection on incumbent Attorney General Mark Pryor, the Democratic nominee for the U.S. Senate. Feedback from prosecutors has been uniformly positive about Pryor's appellate record, Beebe said. "Having said that, not only would I not de-emphasize that, I would build on it," Beebe said. Beebe also said he'd stress consumer protection as attorney general, and urged the law students once they enter the profession to partner their legal practice with public service. "To do less is to dishonor and betray something that's been given to you that not many other people have -- the best education imaginable," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel