Pubdate: Mon, 28 Apr 2003 Source: Birmingham News, The (AL) Copyright: 2003 The Birmingham News Contact: http://al.com/birminghamnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/45 Author: Stan Bailey, News staff writer SENTENCE REFORM ON HOUSE AGENDA MONTGOMERY Three bills designed to fix what many believe is Alabama's broken criminal sentencing system will top the state House of Representatives calendar Tuesday. Approved with virtually no opposition by the House Judiciary Committee last week, the proposals from the Alabama Sentencing Commission are the product of about two years of work aimed at finding punishments other than prison for property criminals while reserving lockups for convicted killers, rapists and robbers. The bills also are aimed at moving Alabama toward a truth-in-sentencing system by 2006, under which parole is abolished and convicts serve their full sentences. If enacted into law, the bills would: Raise the felony theft threshold from $250 to $500 to keep pace with inflation, which would send thousands fewer property criminals to prison in the years ahead. Expand the use of community punishment programs for non-violent convicts. They now are available in only 21 of Alabama's 67 counties. Move the state in three steps over three years to a truth-in-sentencing system, under which parole is abolished and convicts serve 100 percent of their sentences. Rosa Davis, chief assistant attorney general and a member of the Sentencing Commission, said the package of bills represents the panel's efforts to analyze Alabama's sentencing system and propose steps to fix it. "The three bills constitute a multi-faceted approach from three different directions," said Davis. "The theft bills recognize that Alabama is out of line with other states and raises the felony threshold to the level recognized in most other states." Almost derailed: Stern opposition to the felony threshold bill by Alabama retail merchants concerned about losses from repeat offenders almost derailed the reform package in the Judiciary Committee two weeks ago. But a compromise to leave the felony threshold at $250 for repeat offenders brought a unanimous vote of approval by the panel Wednesday. State Rep. Marcel Black, D-Tuscumbia, chairman of the committee and sponsor of the reform package, said he was glad Davis and Charles McDonald, president of the Alabama Retail Association, both approved the compromise. "We're singing out of the same hymn book, but we're not singing very loud," said McDonald. "Those muted tones are music to my ears," Black said before his committee's vote. Davis said the second bill in the reform package expands community corrections programs. It recognizes the need for an increase in effective punishments at the community level to require offenders to pay restitution to victims and otherwise to hold them more accountable for their crimes. The bill would authorize Alabama counties to set up locally run punishment programs as alternatives to prison for non-violent offenders. It would authorize judges to sentence such offenders directly to these programs instead of to prison. "The third bill recognizes the need for overall sentencing reform, recommends appropriate sentences for judicial consideration and identifies offenders appropriate for community punishment," Davis said. The sentencing reform bill would schedule a series of changes in Alabama's sentencing structure to be phased in by 2006. The changes would be made in annual stages, with each stage requiring a vote of the Legislature. If enacted into law, the first phase would provide judges in July with a manual of the state's top 25 crimes along with the commission's suggestions on which of those might be better punished in a community program. The commission also would begin this year to educate judges, prosecutors, defense lawyers and others about the proposed new system. Next year, if the Legislature approves, the commission would implement phase two of the reforms. That would involve informing judges about the length of sentences being imposed in their circuit and statewide for each crime and suggesting voluntary standards for sentences. In 2005, if the Legislature approves, the commission would inform judges about the average length of time convicts are actually serving on their sentences. In 2006, if the Legislature approves, paroles and time off sentences for good behavior would be abolished for all convicts, and new truth-in-sentencing standards would be adopted. Under the truth-in-sentencing system, each convict would be required to serve 100 percent of the sentence imposed by the judge, after which they would be required to serve a year of post-release supervision. Inmates no longer would be allowed to count 75 days off their sentences for each 30 days of good behavior. Instead, they would stand to have their sentences increased up to 20 percent for bad behavior. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake