Pubdate: Fri, 31 Oct 2008 Source: Times-Herald, The (Vallejo, CA) Copyright: 2008 The Times-Herald Contact: http://www.timesheraldonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/993 Authors: Chris Pedersen, Jeff Kauffman, Janice Williams, John Ellis, Karen Jensen VOTE 'NO' ON 5 Please vote "no" on Proposition 5. Here is why it will cost California a fortune while making it a more dangerous place to live: Proposition 5 is supposed to expand on its predecessor, Proposition 36. However, the outcome of Proposition 36 has been a huge disappointment across the state. Since its inception, more than 75 percent of Proposition 36 participants have failed - either by never even showing up or by dropping out of the program before completion. Proposition 5 will shorten parole for methamphetamine dealers and other drug dealing felons from 3 years to just 6 months. Police, prosecutors, and parole supervisors know that shortening parole for drug dealers will dramatically increase violent crime rates. Simply put, Proposition 5 will increase drug related crime by releasing the people who supply drugs into the community. Proposition 5 would provide, in effect, a "get out of jail free" card to other hardened criminals charged with offenses such as identity theft, fraud, auto theft, and burglary by allowing defendants to claim that drugs made them commit their crimes. Proposition 5 sets up a myriad of treatment levels that apply to different defendants depending on how many times they have been to prison and how many times they have failed drug treatment. In reality, Prop 5 will force the courts to use valuable resources to enforce drug treatment programs that, by their own design, will not work. Proposition 5 is expensive. It will set up two new bureaucracies with no accountability, at a cost of hundreds of millions. The oversight committees will have only minimal representation from judges and law enforcement. Proposition 5 is unnecessary. Under current law, no first-time offender arrested solely for possession is sent to prison. Now, please join us and vote "no" on Proposition 5. Help us continue to hold drug dealers and other serious criminals responsible for their crimes. Chris Pedersen Jeff Kauffman Janice Williams John Ellis Karen Jensen Solano County Deputy District Attorneys - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin