Pubdate: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 Source: Mobile Register (AL) Copyright: 2004 Mobile Register. Contact: http://www.al.com/mobileregister/today/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/269 Author: Connie Baggett Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/early+release Note: Monroe County District Attorney Tommy Chapman "This is ridiculous, the result of these early releases will poison law enforcement, the criminal justice system and our community. ." MONROE DRUG DEALER GRANTED PAROLE Prosecutor Calls For Change In Selection Of Early Release Cases MONROEVILLE -- The state parole board voted Tuesday to cut the life sentence given a Monroe County drug trafficker, leading the district attorney who prosecuted the case to demand that the state stop calling drug dealing a nonviolent offense. Alabama Board of Pardons and Paroles members granted early parole for Maurice Antonio Scott, sentenced to life in prison in August 2000 for unlawful distribution of a controlled substance as a habitual offender. Cynthia Dillard, assistant executive director for the parole board, said Scott was transferred to a federal prison, where he will begin serving a mandatory sentence of 131 months -- nearly 11 years -- on drug charges. After that, Dillard said, he will be on supervised release. "He will not be released from custody," Dillard said. "He will just be transferred as soon as the federal officers come pick him up." Scott, 33, was sentenced for the state charges on Aug. 18, 2000, and served some 40 months of a life sentence before he was considered for parole. State officials said inmates sentenced to life terms typically would not be considered for parole before serving 10 years, though some have served only seven years before being considered for parole. Alabama law does, however, allow inmates to be paroled at any time after sentencing with a unanimous vote of the parole board. Dillard said earlier this month that Gov. Bob Riley's office had ordered parole board members to consider scores of nonviolent inmates for early release to relieve overcrowding in the state prison system. Monroe County District Attorney Tommy Chapman said Tuesday he sent letters protesting the early release because he could not personally attend the hearing due to a conference in Birmingham. Members of the county's drug task force were in Mobile serving in a federal court drug case and were unable to attend. Chapman has personally attended at least three such parole hearings so far this month opposing parole for drug dealers. Scott is the first to be granted parole, even though he will not be set free. Chapman asked Riley in a letter dated Jan. 6 to revise guidelines that classified drug dealers as nonviolent offenders. The letter acknowledges the prison overcrowding in the state, but said Chapman was "being overwhelmed with notices from the Parole Board on drug dealers being considered for early parole." Chapman cited one notice for a man sentenced on May 5, 2003, to 20 years for unlawful distribution who will be considered for early parole Feb. 4. "This is ridiculous," the letter states. "The result of these early releases will poison law enforcement, the criminal justice system and our community. ... If you had been to some of the crime scenes where I have been, where drug-induced killers beat and tortured innocent victims, you would agree with me" that drug dealers should not be considered nonviolent offenders. Chapman said the guidelines handed down by Riley's administration and the Legislature to the parole board should be changed so drug dealers are excluded from early release, and he called on other prosecutors, law enforcement officers, elected officials and citizens to contact the governor expressing opposition to early parole consideration for drug dealers. Jeff Emerson, director of communications for Riley's office, said the governor responded to Chapman in a letter Thursday. In the letter, Riley states that the early paroles are necessary due to overcrowding and the current financial crisis in state government. He said his advisers had begun dialogue with prosecutors to "bring about a better understanding of the process" and refinements meant to reduce overcrowding and keep the streets safe. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin