Pubdate: Fri, 4 Jan 2008 Source: Asbury Park Press (NJ) Copyright: 2008 Asbury Park Press Contact: http://www.app.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/26 Author: Michael Symons, Gannett State Bureau MOVE COULD LESSEN DRUG CRIME PENALTY Lawmakers advanced measures Thursday that would ease the sentences imposed on some people convicted of drug crimes and help ex-convicts get government jobs or professional licenses. The Senate voted 33-0 for a bill, also approved Thursday by the Assembly Judiciary Committee, that grants courts discretion to lessen the financial penalties for some drug offenses and let some people perform "reformative service" to pay some of the debt. Also, the Senate budget committee endorsed creating a certificate of rehabilitation for some felons who convince a judge or the State Parole Board they have made efforts to reform themselves. Both proposals are due for final legislative consideration Monday. "The problem we face with crime today, especially gangs -- you can't just arrest the problem away," said Stephan Finkel, an assistant attorney general and the Office of the Attorney General's director of legislative affairs. "Enforcement is necessary, but you also need to have prevention, you need to have reentry measures, so people who make a mistake and get caught and go to prison, their lives aren't over. They have to come back and be able to reintegrate into society and not go back into jail. We have to stop the revolving door," Finkel said. People convicted of drug crimes are assessed fines, on top of the other details of their sentences, of $500 to $3,000 per offense, depending on the seriousness of the offense. The bill allows judges to impose a single penalty for the highest-degree offense, rather than penalties for each count, to foster a defendant's rehabilitation. As an alternative to pay off up to half of those penalties -- which are deposited into the Drug Enforcement and Demand Reduction Fund to support drug and alcohol abuse prevention and treatment programs -- defendants can propose a plan of "reformative service" intended to help their rehabilitation. Such service would focus on training, education or work, covering things such as substance abuse treatment, educational or vocational services, employment training or services, family counseling, community service and volunteer work. A judge, with input from prosecutors, would decide whether to accept such a plan. "Some people just are not going to be able to pay, and that inability to pay puts them at a disadvantage, maybe encourages them to engage in new crimes, get into selling drugs," Finkel said. The rehabilitation certificate would not be available to violent offenders, those who targeted children, those convicted of corruption charges and those with multiple prior convictions or pending charges. Certificates would show that the holder is presumed rehabilitated of the crime, enabling them to obtain public employment from which they might otherwise be barred. Employers generally wouldn't be allowed to deny certificate holders a job. Holders of such certificates could also use it to qualify for state-issued professional licenses and certifications for various occupations and businesses and their qualifying exams, except for lawyers, law-enforcement officers and emergency management positions. The bill doesn't apply to private employers. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake