Pubdate: Tue, 15 Jun 2004 Source: Poughkeepsie Journal (NY) Copyright: 2004 Poughkeepsie Journal Contact: http://www.poughkeepsiejournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1224 Date: May 28, 2004 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?140 (Rockefeller Drug Laws) DRUG TALKS MUST LEAD TO ACTION Some state lawmakers are pleased with themselves for having the guts to meet in public to talk about their failed efforts to change New York's drug laws. This passes for progress in Albany. But it's not good enough for those who realize it borders on insanity to lock up nonviolent, first-offense offenders for decades, sometimes life, for possessing a few ounces of drugs. In some instances, rapists and murderers are doing less time. It's not enough for those serving in prison because they got caught in someone else's web of deceit. There are people like Lance Marrow, given 15 years to life after a guest brought drugs into his house -- drugs found by police. It's not enough for the countless judges who have criticized the drug laws as they were forced to impose mandatory sentences on defendants. Retired New York City Supreme Court Judge Jerome Marks once called the so-called Rockefeller drug statutes "the most unjust law enacted in my time." It's not enough for those who profoundly believe many of these convicts should be in drug treatment programs. And it's not enough even for those who disregard all those social and fairness arguments and just look at the cold, hard numbers from the taxpayers' standpoint: Drug treatment can cost less than $15,000 a year; incarceration twice that. Over the years, Gov. George Pataki's own actions have demonstrated that he, too, knows the drug laws are out of kilter. Each holiday season, he grants a certain number of clemencies, and the large majority of them are drug-related cases. In some cases, like in 2000, all the governor's clemencies have gone to prisoners convicted of nonviolent, drug-related crimes. Give judges discretion Nobody is talking about opening up the prison doors and letting all the drug convicts out. But certain revisions, such as doing away with mandatory minimums, must occur. It's common sense to let a judge take into account whether someone is a first-time or repeat offender. It's common sense to let judges consider mitigating factors, such as the actual role a person played in a drug transaction. Sentences shouldn't be strictly based on the weight of the drugs sold or in someone's possession when apprehended. Small-time drug carriers shouldn't be doing more time than the drug kingpins bankrolling these illegal operations. At the recent meeting, 10 lawmakers representing the Assembly and Senate talked about these failed reform efforts and essentially agreed to continue to disagree. Traditionally, the Democratic-controlled Assembly has sought broader reforms than either the Republican governor or the GOP-controlled Senate are willing to support. Over the years, the governor has shown some flexibility, suggesting, for instance, that judges should be given more authority to impose treatment rather than incarceration in some instances. Reform advocates say the governor's proposals don't go far enough. Pataki also wants to increase penalties when a gun is involved in drug transactions -- an idea the Democrats should quickly embrace in exchange for getting more nonviolent offenders into drug treatment programs. A compromise can, and should, be reached; the two sides have been close at times. They should keep talking -- but a wary public has every reason to refrain from even faint praise until an agreement is sealed. - -----Original Message----- From: Tony Newman Sent: Monday, June 14, 2004 5:42 PM To: Penney, John Subject: Rockefeller Reform: EDITORIAL NEEDED! Dear John Penney/ Poughkeepsie Journal Ed Board--- We know that your newspaper has been a leading advocate in calling for reform of the Rockefeller drug laws. Today, as Rockefeller reform is at a standstill, we ask you to please weigh in again. As you know, this year, the state legislature created an unprecedented opportunity for Rockefeller reform by convening a conference committee to reach an agreement for changing these drug laws. But four weeks after its initial meeting, the committee has been terminated without accomplishing reform. An editorial call for action from your publication could prove crucially helpful at this moment. Longtime advocates are clear about what real Rockefeller reform means: sentence reduction, judicial discretion, retroactivity, and treatment options outside of prison. The Senate Republican leadership has only been willing to talk about sentence reduction for a small minority of Rockefeller cases, and has resisted serious consideration of the other three components of real reform as well. Despite their finger-pointing, the Senate Republicans are clearly responsible for walking away from the conference committee negotiating table. Perhaps their cozy relationship with the state DAs explains their aversion to real reform. Perhaps it's due to their political investment in the booming prison business. Two of the Senators on the conference committee, Dale Volker and Mike Nozzolio, have a combined 14 prisons in their districts -- a whopping 23% of the state's total prison population. For them, more humane and effective drug policies -- real reform -- could threaten a steady flow of taxpayer dollars to their districts. An editorial questioning and highlighting the Republicans' underlying political motives for resisting reform -- i.e. DAs and prisons -- would help send an essential message to Albany: that the people of New York understand the political game, the players and the stakes. Thank you so much for your consideration. If you would like more information, please visit www.realreform2004.org (http://www.realreform2004.org/ . We have just launched a one minute flash animation that explains the issue: www.realreform2004.org/flash. For more information on the current status of Rockefeller reform please see the following articles: The Times Union (Albany, NY) June 9, 2004 Wednesday DRUG LAW DEBACLE; A conference committee reaches a dead end in a long overdue attempt to agree on reform State lawmakers appear on the verge of once again walking away from a long overdue reform of the harsh Rockefeller Drug Laws. This is shameful and cruel, and the Senate's leaders must bear full blame for becoming an obstacle to progress. For seven years the Legislature has failed to reach an accord on a more just and humane system of punishment for those who sell or buy drugs. This year, there was hope that reform would be achieved. Those hopes were buoyed when the Senate and Assembly took the rare step of trying to reach an agreement in an open conference committee. Advocates for drug law reform, which include nearly everyone except the state's prosecutors, were heartened. But on Monday, those hopes appeared dashed when senators on the conference committee walked away without reaching an agreement with their Assembly counterparts and without any further public meetings on the agenda. The talk is that the Senate will continue its deliberations behind closed doors and likely pass a measure later this month. But without the Assembly on board, the one-house bill will be meaningless. The impasse comes down to this: Senate negotiators favor reducing sentences for the most major drug offenses, which are now punishable by mandatory terms of up to life in prison. Assembly negotiators want more liberal sentencing guidelines to extend beyond that, down to low-level offenses. And, most importantly, they want judges to have the discretion to send offenders to treatment programs rather than prison. The Assembly's position is a blueprint for genuine reform. Under the Rockefeller statutes, even first-time offenders can face a prison term of 15 years to life for selling as little as four ounces of a controlled substance. Drug users are also liable for long prison terms, even though most experts on addiction agree that they can be better rehabilitated through treatment programs. Reform also would save taxpayers money and ease the strain on the state budget. One watchdog group, the Correctional Association of New York, estimates that overhauling drug laws could save some $250 million a year, based on a $60,000 annual cost to keep a single offender behind bars. Those costs must be weighed against the demonstrated failure of the Rockefeller statutes over the last three decades. They have never stopped drug crime in New York, as originally intended. Instead drug kingpins avoid justice by using youngsters to ply their trade, and then suffer the consequences if they are caught. Drug users, meanwhile, aren't helped by a system that leaves no room for treatment as an alternative to jail. The only staunch defenders of these draconian laws are the state's district attorneys, who use them to wring plea bargains from suspects. But what a huge cost New York is paying for that kind of strong-arm law enforcement -- a cost that must be measured not only in dollars but in far too many shattered lives as well. Newsday Drug laws' rocky road After years, lawmakers in Albany still haven't achieved essential reforms June 14, 2004 State legislators have been talking about reforming the Rockefeller drug laws for almost a decade. Unfortunately, it's still mostly just talk. Worthwhile changes have been made at the margins, but a wasteful core of long, mandatory prison sentences for minor drug offenses remains stubbornly in place. Albany should step up to the plate and return sentencing discretion to judges. That's the best way to ensure that punishment will fit individual crimes and that the public will get as much security for its prison dollars as possible. There was cause for hope last month. For the first time, reform was debated in public by a conference committee with members from both the Senate and the Assembly. In the past, Rockefeller reform - like most other state issues - was left to New York's three men in a room, a dysfunctional system in which the governor, Senate majority leader and Assembly speaker call the shots. That's an important step forward on process but, unfortunately, it hasn't ended the stalemate. The committee, chaired by Assemb. Jeffrion Aubry (D-East Elmhurst) and Sen. Dale Volker (R-Depew) met six times before calling it quits - at least for now. It made progress on agreeing to reduce some prison terms. But Republicans balked when it came to the heart of the matter: eliminating mandatory prison sentences. When prison is mandatory, prosecutors dictate who will land behind bars when they decide what charges to file. Think of a baseball game in which one team is allowed to umpire. That's just not how things should work. Prosectors should prosecute, defense lawyers defend and judges judge, which includes meting out punishment. Mandatory prison sentences waste money and lives. They should no longer be the law in New York. The Daily Record of Rochester (Rochester, NY) June 11, 2004 Friday SECTION: NEWS ROCKEFELLER DRUG LAW REFORM URGED BY FORMER NEW YORK prosecutors, judges BYLINE: Staff With discussions to reform the Rockefeller drug laws at an apparent impasse in the joint legislative conference committee, the New York State Bar Association has released a statement endorsed by former prosecutors and judges urging legislators to continue working toward an agreement. The statement says: "We, the undersigned, have had firsthand experience with enforcing and implementing the Rockefeller drug laws. We have felt our hands tied by the unduly harsh, mandatory sentencing requirements of these laws. Too many people have been warehoused who might have been returned to productive, law-abiding lives through drug treatment. Too many families have been destroyed. Too much time and money have been wasted carrying out a failed policy. Our legislative leaders should not miss this opportunity to enact a much needed reform; a failure now might well push back any hope of reform for many years." "Three decades of experience under these laws have shown that they have failed to achieve their goals," said Kenneth G. Standard, NYSBA president. "They have not eliminated the drug trade while they have filled New York's prisons with low-level, non-violent offenders and addicts who receive unduly harsh prison terms. It is a widely held belief that the Rockefeller drug laws have had a deleterious effect on public trust and confidence in the legal system." The statement continues, "For many years there has been a general recognition that New York's draconian 'Rockefeller drug laws' must be reformed. Enacted in 1973, these mandatory sentencing laws were intended to deter drug use by sending drug 'king pins' to prison for very long periods of time. While we believe in prosecuting drug 'king pins' to the fullest extent of the law, three decades of experience under these laws have shown that they have failed to achieve their goals. They have not eliminated the drug trade and have filled New York's prisons with low-level, non-violent offenders and addicts who receive unduly harsh prison terms. This approach has wasted money and lives. It also is inconsistent with the current recognition that drug prevention and treatment, rather than incarceration, are more effective means of dealing with the 'drug problem.' It is widely believed that the results of Rockefeller drug laws have had a deleterious effect on public trust and confidence in the legal system. "Bills have been proposed to enact much needed reform of these laws. Although the members of the Legislature and their staff are to be commended for their serious and responsible attempt to resolve differences between bills and reach agreement, the recently-established Joint Conference Committee has to this point been unable to break the stalemate that has for years prevented much-needed reform. The New York State Legislature's most recent effort to reform the Rockefeller Drug Laws appears to be close to failing." The state urges the legislature to reform the Rockefeller drug laws and was signed by: * Judge Leslie Crocker Snyder, former Supreme Court judge, New York County; * Judge Richard J. Bartlett, former chief administrative judge, Unified Court System; * Judge Stewart J. Hancock Jr., former associate judge, Court of Appeals; * Judge Richard D. Simons, former associate judge, Court of Appeals; * Judge Betty Friedlander, former Tompkins County Court judge; * Judge Burton Roberts, former administrative judge, Supreme Court, Bronx County; * William Murphy, former District Attorney, Richmond County; * Judge Michael Kelly, former assistant District Attorney, Erie County; * Peter Gerstenzang, former assistant District Attorney, Albany County; * Mark Weinstein, former assistant District Attorney, Bronx County; and * Lawrence S. Goldman, former assistant District Attorney, New York County. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager