Pubdate: Wed, 28 Dec 2005 Source: Albuquerque Journal (NM) Copyright: 2005 Albuquerque Journal Contact: http://www.abqjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/10 Author: Carla Crowder THE STATE'S REPEAT OFFENDER LAW WAS CHANGED IN 2000 TO CLEAR OUT NONVIOLENT PRISONERS So far, few are affected. Their rap sheets were similar. Their prison sentences identical, life without parole. From there, Rex Norris and Willmer Miller faced dramatically different treatment from the criminal justice system. Norris, 53, convicted as a habitual offender in a 1993 drug trafficking case, is home now. The Legislature and the courts had decided Alabama's repeat offender law was unnecessarily harsh, and a Jefferson County judge this year slashed Norris' original sentence. Miller, 61, asked for a similar reduction after 15 years behind bars for drug trafficking. A different Jefferson County judge said no, and Miller died in prison while appealing. The Norris and Miller cases illustrate the differences in the way Alabama courts are handling a change to the state's Habitual Felony Offender Act, sometimes called "Three Strikes and You're Out." In 2000, the Legislature amended the law to allow lighter sentences for habitual felons with nonviolent backgrounds. The hope was that judges would evaluate the records of aging prisoners and determine that many were safe bets for parole. Cutting the ranks of prisoners facing life behind bars would save the state millions in prison costs. But only a handful of prisoners have been released. Meanwhile, Alabama's prison population is again on the rise after more than a year of decline. The Department of Corrections houses 27,800 people in space for 13,000. County sheriffs, fed up with perennial backlogs of thousands of state inmates in their jails, are back in court demanding relief. Experts regularly turn out reports calling for shorter sentences and alternative punishments to curb prison growth. Yet men who've served decades for less violent offenses go nowhere. "There are a lot of people that see the problem, but there's no consensus how to handle it," said Vernon Barnett, Gov. Bob Riley's deputy legal adviser. Next month, Barnett will urge the Legislature to pass a package of prison-reform measures. Barnett predicts increased examination of the habitual offender law, which can inflate sentences a decade or more, often based on a drug convict's previous minor crimes. Until the 2000 amendment, offenders who had three prior felonies of any sort had to be sent away forever on conviction for a Class A felony, considered the most serious. With drug trafficking classified as Class A, someone arrested with an ounce of cocaine or 2.2 pounds of marijuana could be imprisoned for life, no parole. The law meant burglars and drug dealers were spending more time in prison than some murderers. The 2000 amendment gave judges the option of sentencing these offenders to "life," which generally means 30 years in prison with parole possible after 10. After realizing that several hundred repeat offenders sentenced between 1980 and 2000 were not eligible for the same breaks, lawmakers made the amendment retroactive in 2001. State isn't keeping track: Bureaucratic delays prevented any paroles until a 2004 Alabama Supreme Court decision in favor of Junior Mack Kirby, a drug trafficker, who became the first life-without-paroler to be freed under the amendment. Kirby, 62, went home to Jackson County in June. He had lawyers, as did some of the 30 or so prisoners who have received new sentences. But the re-sentencing is not automatic. Prisoners must file appeals. And while an informal network of family, friends and "jailhouse lawyers" - inmates self-taught in the law - have shepherded some appeals, there is no formal state system to handle the cases, some of which require complex arguments. At least four eligible prisoners have gotten released, but no one is keeping track, so the complete number is unknown. In a few counties, judges have led efforts to get prisoners re-sentenced. But judges' interpretations of the law vary widely. Some say the law excludes those with a prior robbery because the Legislature used the word "nonviolent" in the amendment's title. Other judges have ordered new, lighter sentences to offenders who have a robbery conviction, as long as the three priors were nonviolent and the offenders behaved well in prison. At least 15 men with robbery convictions have been re-sentenced and are awaiting parole hearings. Still other judges have refused to resentence any repeat offenders. With violent convictions included, the number of potentially parole-eligible inmates soars to 955, according to the Alabama Sentencing Commission. In its extensive analysis on the habitual offender law, however, the commission says that violent offenders should not get the shorter sentences. The commission's official estimate finds that 60 inmates serving life without parole and 248 serving life could be eligible. Hundreds? Thousands?: Montgomery lawyer Bryan Stevenson, executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative, a nonprofit law firm that represented Kirby and other habitual offenders, including Norris and Miller, believes the Sentencing Commission's estimates are low. "The Legislature was trying to get people out of prison who have no demonstrated history of violent behavior and who pose no serious risk of violent behavior on release," Stevenson said. "I think there are hundreds and maybe thousands who, if their cases were examined, might meet that criteria. "For example," he said, "arson directed at an abandoned tool shed may not be the kind of crime that should keep someone in prison for life with no parole. There are some folks with robbery convictions where they were accomplices or otherwise did not do anything which would be considered violent." Some judges have agreed. Appeals courts have left it up to the judge to determine nonviolence based upon "the nature of the defendant's underlying conviction, other factors brought before the judge in the record on the case" and information from the DOC and the parole board concerning the inmate's behavior in prison. Big prison expense : Unquestionably, the aging prisoners who linger behind bars because of enhanced sentences are expensive. Many are in their 50s and 60s. Graying prisoners and their health problems caused the Department of Corrections to spend $13 million last year on off-site medical care. That's in addition to the $51 million paid to the prisons' contract medical provider. Miller, who was undergoing cancer treatment when he died, would have faced a minimum three years in prison without the habitual offender enhancement that bumped his drug trafficking sentence up to life without parole. "Mr. Miller's only prior convictions, minor property offenses for which he served 13 months' hard labor, were more than 20 years old," Stevenson said. Jerald Sanders, a thief from Mobile, became the poster child for Alabama's habitual offender woes when he stole a bicycle from a screened-in porch in 1994 and was sent to prison for the rest of his life. The 50-year-old's sentence has been reduced, but he has not been considered for parole. "We're angry at that person for stealing the bike, the lawnmower, but they're not gonna hurt anybody. We need to save those beds for people who commit murder," said Barnett, the governor's legal adviser. "Everyone wanted the war on drugs and to 'get tough on crime,' and while everyone still wants to protect society, they realize that didn't work. We're not protecting society like we thought we would. There are better ways to do it." Starting over at 53: For Norris, the 12 years he served for drug trafficking "seems like a long time. But a lot of guys are doing longer for less than what I was into," he said in an interview at his home outside Trussville, 22 miles from St. Clair Correctional Facility, where he did most of his time. "It seems like it's so far away, but it's not, just up the road in Springville," Norris said, sounding adrift at adjusting to an outside world he never expected to know. No one is more surprised than he at this sudden freedom, and his home reflects that. It is meticulously tidy, his mail laid out in rows, neatly as was required in prison. Worried about the cost of utilities, he keeps the heat down and wears layers and a knit cap indoors. He cooks a lot of cornbread, a holdover from his last months in prison when he was assigned kitchen duty. Norris wishes he could work more. His job in heating and air-conditioning is part-time. He's happy about reuniting with his four children and elderly father, and tries to be of use, offering his strength to do odd jobs for relatives who live nearby. In January, he'll start a computer class at the public library. "Pretty much, I'm starting over, and I'm 53," he said. Norris had three drug convictions from the 1970s and early 1980s when he was arrested in a police sting in 1993. He was convicted of trying to buy 19 pounds of marijuana. A Jefferson County judge had no choice but to sentence him to life without parole. He filed a slew of appeals, all of which were denied. By 1999, Norris accepted his fate and moved into St. Clair prison's honor dorm, reserved for prisoners who abide by a strict code of conduct. "We tried ... to stay above the riff-raff of prison," Norris said. Many of his fellow nonviolent habitual offenders remain in the honor dorm, trying to get their sentences reduced under the Kirby decision. Maybe it's the paralegal certificate he earned in prison, but some of Norris' comments sound oddly like the lawyer's from the governor's office. "I know the police and courts and all are all concerned with drugs, and the way the country's going. And (prisons) are a necessity and some people have to be there, and there has to be some law and order. "But the answer on the drug problem doesn't have to be to lock them up and throw away the key," he said. "I think everybody knows that." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman