Pubdate: Wed, 08 Dec 2004 Source: Press & Sun Bulletin (NY) Copyright: 2004 Press & Sun Bulletin Contact: http://www.pressconnects.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/878 Author: Yancey Roy, Albany Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?140 (Rockefeller Drug Laws) PROPOSAL WOULD REDUCE HARSHEST DRUG LAW PENALTIES Activists Call Tentative Deal 'Half A Step' In Right Direction ALBANY -- Lawmakers landed a deal Tuesday to change a portion of New York's Rockefeller-era drug laws, a change activists called "half a step in the right direction." Some of the harshest sentences under New York's Rockefeller-era drug laws could be reduced. The current 15-years-to-life maximum sentence could be reduced to an eight-to-20-year sentence. The weight thresholds for what constitutes the top (A-1) felony would be doubled from, say, possession of 4 ounces of cocaine to 8. Nonviolent offenders would be eligible for treatment programs sooner. However, the agreement didn't include long-sought goals of reformers: giving sentencing discretion to judges, reducing sentences of mid-level felonies and allowing some offenders to avoid jail altogether in favor of treatment programs. The breakthrough on drug sentences could mean that the roughly 400 inmates serving the longest sentences (typically 15 years to life) could ask the courts to reduce their time. Time off for good behavior or "merit time" could double for the type-A felonies. Also, a sentence of three years to life could become a three-year sentence. But the type-B felonies, which account for the bulk of the 18,000 or so inmates serving time for drug crimes, wouldn't be addressed. "This is only half a step to real reform," said Michael Blain, director of public policy for the Drug Policy Alliance, an advocacy group. He said "real reform" would include judicial discretion on sentencing, as well as more treatment options and sentencing retroactivity. However, he praised the reductions announced Tuesday for the most serious crimes. Other activists had a cooler reaction. "The mandatory sentencing is still in place. Although they have been reduced, the sentences are still unduly long," Randy Credico of the Mothers of the Disappeared and Andrew Cuomo and Bob Gangi of the Drop the Rock coalition said in a joint statement. The Democrat-led Assembly and the Republican-controlled Senate each overwhelmingly approved the measure. Enacted under Gov. Nelson Rockefeller in 1973, New York's drug laws are considered among the nation's harshest. Offenders can receive life terms for possessing or selling even small amounts of narcotics. The laws grant judges little discretion on sentencing people convicted of certain felonies. Opponents of the laws say the measures haven't curbed drug use and have disproportionately affected minorities, who account for the bulk of drug convicts. Lawmakers have been engaged in reform negotiations off-and-on for about four years. Gov. George E. Pataki, who said he'd sign the bill, said the willingness to change drug sentencing "reflects a greater knowledge than we had 30 years ago." Others also hailed the agreement. "This bill achieves the goal to reform the state's outdated Rockefeller Drug Laws by addressing first-time, nonviolent drug offenders who have received unfairly lengthy prison sentences under the old law," said Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno, R-Brunswick, Rensselaer County. He said he agreed that the measure didn't go far enough but that it would "help thousands of people." The Democratic point man on the issue, Assemblyman Jeffrion Aubry, had long championed an overhaul of the laws. But he called Tuesday's deal "progress." One of the harshest critics of the laws, Sen. Tom Duane, D-Manhattan, said the measure was so minor in scope "that we should be ashamed of ourselves." The highlights Some of the prospective changes and omissions in New York's drug sentencing laws with the tentative deal: * The current 15-years-to-life maximum sentence could be reduced to an 8-to-20-year sentence. * The weight thresholds for what constitutes the top (A-1) felony would be doubled from, say, possession of 4 ounces of cocaine to 8. * Nonviolent offenders would be eligible for treatment programs sooner. Time off for good behavior or "merit time" could double for the type-A felonies. * Type-B felonies, which account for the bulk of the 18,000 or so inmates serving time for drug crimes, wouldn't be addressed. * Judges wouldn't be given total discretion over sentencing. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek