Pubdate: Thu, 04 May 2006 Source: Record, The (Hackensack, NJ) Copyright: 2006 North Jersey Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.bergen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/44 Authors: Douglass Crouse and Carolyn Salazar, Staff Writers NAME OF THE GAME: SHAME If you don't want your name in the paper as a lowlife, don't come to Paterson looking for drugs and hookers. That's the message city officials say is behind Wednesday's publication of the names of nearly 400 residents of the counties of Bergen and Passaic in two North Jersey newspapers. The individuals' common tie, authorities say, is being charged with drug or prostitution activity on the streets of Paterson. The list, in a full-page ad, gives the names of arrested adults, as well as their street, hometown, date of birth and category of offense. It is the city's latest tactic in targeting out-of-town drug buyers who fuel a rampant street trade. Police and city officials say the intent is to shame drug users and prostitution johns and alert their communities to their alleged activities. "I think the message we're sending is that if you commit the act, don't think you can go back home and nobody's going to know what you did," Police Chief James Wittig said. But critics questioned the fairness of a list based solely on charges and not convictions -- echoing concerns aired in other cities that have tried or considered such plans. Paterson ultimately dropped a plan in 1998 to publish the names of prostitutes and johns -- and that would have included only those with a conviction. This week's advertisement, titled "Caveat Emptor (Buyer Beware)," appeared in The Record and Herald News, which are both owned by North Jersey Media Group. The list covers an arrest period from July 1, 2005, through Feb. 28, and is the first in what officials say will be quarterly ads. The ad's cost was unclear. The company's in-house records showed a cost of $2,463, but Mayor Joey Torres said it was about $3,500. Wittig said it was covered with police funds. Torres said the impetus for the ad was a Record series last July on the city's drug trade and police operations that followed it. The series showed how Paterson has grown as a regional draw for drug users. A follow-up article in February reported the city's plan to publish defendant names. "As result of The Record series and the police sting operations that followed, we made the decision to go ahead," Torres said. Torres is up for reelection on Tuesday, and his opponents on the ballot questioned the timing of the ad. But Torres denied that politics played into the equation. "The pendulum swings when it swings," he said. "These are things that are on the drawing board. They've been planned. The timing just happened to be now." Torres said it had taken time to compile and verify the information and ensure the city was on firm legal footing. He and other city officials stressed that the information comes from public arrest reports. Several names are listed more than once, and that of one man from Wayne appears three times. And despite official fact-checking, a woman from New Milford listed twice appears with birth dates that are nine days apart. Those under 18 are listed as a "juvenile," but their street name and date of birth do appear. Wittig himself acknowledged that some of the listed individuals might have already had their cases dismissed. Three years ago, Camden tried taking out ads that listed the names, ages and hometowns of people charged with buying heroin, said Bill Shralow, a spokesman for the Camden County Prosecutor's Office. The effort did not run into legal problems, but became too costly to continue, he said. The ads were paid for by money confiscated during reverse sting operations targeting drug buyers. "We like to think it was an additional deterrent," Shralow said. "But there was really no way to quantify it." David Mactas, executive director of Straight & Narrow, a Paterson addiction services center, said seeing their names published might wake up some addicts. However, he did not foresee a great impact. "When you look at the disincentives every day that are real, significant and immediate for addicts," he said, "having your name published in the paper might not be very formidable by comparison." Brian J. Neary, a defense attorney in Hackensack, noted that Paterson's list gives no information about the circumstances of the arrests or the disposition of the charges. He called it "the newspaper equivalent of the stockade." "Any one of these suspects could have been part of a drug sweep by police," he said. "They might have been on the wrong street at the wrong time." But he and another defense attorney said they doubted the published list would affect someone's ability to get a fair trial. Repeated calls to the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey for comment were not returned. Neary and others also questioned the fairness of publishing the names of out-of-towners, but not Paterson residents. "It's a week before Election Day," he said. "Maybe to publish those names might anger some of the electorate." Torres said he plans to publish the names of city suspects in the future but felt the initial focus should be on outsiders. Lawrence Spagnola, the former city police chief now running for mayor, said he had proposed a similar plan four years ago as chief. He criticized Torres for waiting until election eve to run the ad. "As a matter of fairness, I would think I would only put the people that were convicted," he said. In 1998, the City Council voted to publish the names of convicted prostitutes and the men who solicited them. But then-Mayor Marty Barnes blocked the move, citing the potential for lawsuits. Years earlier, Ronald Fava, then county prosecutor, printed posters with convicted dealers' names and distributed them to schools, police stations and libraries. Some newspapers have refused to publish ads naming suspects who have not been convicted. They include The Denver Post and The Miami Herald. Samuel Martin, senior vice president of sales for North Jersey Media Group, said the advertising department does not print anything it believes to be "false or misleading." He said all the information in the Paterson ad appeared to be based on public records. "As long as we're given ad copy that appears to be correct and truthful and doesn't offend or violate any policy the publisher has set, we would publish it," Martin said. "Our job is not to attempt to censor information needlessly." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake