Pubdate: Mon, 11 Oct 2004 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2004 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.mercurynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Howard Mintz, Mercury News PROP. 66 CAMPAIGN UNLEASHES EMOTIONS Initiative to Ease Harshest Sentencing Law in U.S. Gaining To backers of Proposition 66, which would soften California's harsh "three strikes, you're out" law, next month's election is all about thousands of prison inmates like Alex Price. A San Jose judge put Price behind bars for life for a "third strike" of possessing less than a gram of methamphetamine. To opponents, particularly in law enforcement, the vote boils down to convicts like John Bunyard. A career criminal with a rap sheet of murders and rapes, the "third-striker" sentenced to life in Santa Clara County would be eligible for release if Proposition 66 passes. These grim choices highlight an increasingly tense and vigorous campaign over the future of the toughest sentencing law in the nation. With weeks to go before the election, there is no apparent middle ground for voters, who are being bombarded with emotionally charged examples of why a change in the "three strikes" law would either result in fair justice or releasing violent felons to the streets. The objective of Proposition 66 is simple enough: It would change California law to require that a defendant be convicted of a violent or serious felony to qualify for a "third strike" sentence of 25 years to life. California now is the only state that permits defendants to receive those stiff sentences for non-violent "third strikes," including simple drug possession and petty theft. Thus far, recent polls show strong support for softening the law, no small feat in tough-on-crime California. Voters 10 years ago overwhelmingly approved "three strikes" after Polly Klaas was kidnapped and murdered by parolee Richard Allen Davis. But the consequences of changing "three strikes" under Proposition 66's terms are a subject of heated debate. Holding up mug shots of local criminals, district attorneys throughout the state have warned if the law is changed, thousands of violent "third-strikers" would be released, along with more than 20,000 convicts serving time under the state's equally harsh "two strikes" sentencing law. Violent felons "I don't feel the public will support Prop. 66 if they know it would release child molesters, rapists and murderers," said Brian Gurwitz, an Orange County prosecutor working on the anti-66 campaign. Proposition 66 backers say prosecutors are engaging in what Joe Klaas, the campaign co-chair and Polly's grandfather, calls "malicious scare tactics." To underscore the tension behind the issue, Joe Klaas is a strong supporter of changing "three strikes" so it applies only to violent felonies, while Polly's father, Marc Klaas, is squarely against the ballot measure. Supporters of the change say it would apply only to about 4,000 inmates serving "three strikes" sentences for non-violent third offenses, and guarantee that future "three strikes" punishment is reserved for the worst of the worst. "We're not going to open the floodgates," said former Santa Clara County Judge LaDoris Cordell, who has been actively campaigning for the initiative. "It's finally making the law fair." The prospect of defendants getting life terms for relatively minor third offenses has been the most controversial element of "three strikes." From pizza thieves to a convict who stole golf clubs, cases of defendants getting life terms for minor crimes have provoked a backlash against the law, even if some defendants had lengthy criminal records. The California Supreme Court in 1996 gave judges some leeway to throw out "third strikes" "in the interests of justice." But the ruling had strict limits and critics say it's been applied unevenly. Efforts to soften the law have repeatedly failed in the Legislature. And last year, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected a crucial legal challenge by finding that life terms for petty theft and other non-violent felonies are constitutional. 'Buried alive' inmates Bankrolled by a wealthy Sacramento insurance broker whose son is in prison on a "two strikes" sentence, Proposition 66 gained momentum from the start. That worries people like Kathy Amen, one of Bunyard's victims who spent a day as his hostage in Nevada in 1973 -- around the time he murdered two other women. In 1995, Bunyard, dubbed the "Nob Hill rapist" for a string of assaults in San Francisco in the 1970s, was sentenced to 25-years to life in Santa Clara County for an attempted lewd act on a 14-year-old girl. Compared with his past, it was a relatively minor crime -- Bunyard had nine felony convictions overall, including the two murders, when paroled to San Jose in 1986. The "third strike" that put him away was a non-violent offense that could get him released right away if Proposition 66 passes. "This is just one maniac," said Amen, who testified in Bunyard's "third-strike" case and believed he was in prison for good. "A lot of people don't realize what this really means. I didn't even know." Opponents are using such cases in an attempt to shrink support, but their campaign is running on a shoestring budget so far. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is expected to throw his weight behind the opposition with an appearance later this month. Backers of Proposition 66, meanwhile, say cases like Bunyard's are an aberration. They counter with inmates who've been "buried alive," their term for unfair life prison terms. State records show that more than half of California's "three-strikers" are in prison for non-violent crimes, and supporters of changing the law say most of those inmates had criminal histories that resemble Alex Price's. A local judge sentenced Price to 25 years to life earlier this year on a drug possession charge that was a so-called "wobbler," which can be charged as a misdemeanor or a felony. His two prior "strikes" occurred 12 years ago, one for assault with a deadly weapon and the other for battery. Prosecutors point out that Price flunked out of drug treatment, had numerous parole violations and repeated "second chances." Defense attorneys say he was no angel, but no John Bunyard, either. Price is unlikely to get out of prison unless the law is changed. "He's a prime example," said Craig Kennedy, a San Jose deputy public defender who tracks "three strikes" cases. "We know this is not a guy who is going to rob your house, beat you up or commit sex offenses. These sentences aren't necessarily what communities want." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake