Pubdate: 12-06-98 Source: Orange County Register (CA) Section: Front Page, Above The Fold Copyright: 1998 The Orange County Register Contact: http://www.ocregister.com/ Author: Martin Wisckol SECOND THOUGHTS ON 'THREE STRIKES' LAW Crime: Support Is Growing For A Requirement That The Third Offense Be A Violent One. Sue Reams marched into the polls in November 1994 and, like millions of Californians, punched "yes" for Proposition 184, a state law calling for 25 years-to-life sentences for third-time felons. "I thought they meant murderers and rapists," said Reams, a 51-year-old insurance broker from Fountain Valley. Reams came to understand the law better after her only son, Shane, was arrested for being a lookout while a friend sold $20 of rock cocaine in 1996. Her son's conviction for that felony, coupled with two prior burglary convictions, sent him to Pleasant Valley State Prison in Coalinga for 25 years to life. "I didn't fully understand (the law) until he was convicted," Reams said. "The lawyer said, 'They don't put people in prison for 25 to life for watching somebody sell drugs.' And I believed that. ... It's cruel and unjust. It's a political issue, totally misunderstood by the public." The law has been touted as key to the state's lowest crime rates in a generation. Even critics such as Sue Reams do not want it repealed altogether - rather,they want the law changed so that the third strike must be a violent felony. Reams and fellow activists are steadily building an audience for their cause, both statewide and in Orange County. While the county was one of the state's strongest supporters of the law's passage, there is growing sentiment among county lawmakers that "three strikes, you're out" needs refinement. In fact, the county has become a key player in the movement for change. "There are cases where these guys are not career criminals and just got caught up in something relatively minor," said Assemblyman Scott Baugh, R-Huntington Beach, who supported the law in 1994 but now wonders if amendments should be made. Two of Orange County's four incumbent Republican Assembly members - Baugh and Marilyn Brewer of Irvine - crossed party lines in September to support a bill to study the successes and failures of the law. That bill, which was vetoed by Gov. Pete Wilson, was launched with the help of Tim Carpenter, a Fullerton activist who works with Reams and other members of the county chapter of Families to Amend California's Three Strikes, or FACTS. "We have the toughest terrain in Orange County," said Carpenter. "If we are successful in moving (Orange County lawmakers), we can move the rest of the Legislature." A third county GOP incumbent, Villa Park Assemblyman Bill Campbell, opposed the study bill over a since-forgotten detail. But Campbell, said Wednesday that the third strike should be required to be a violent offense. That is the goal being pursued by Reams and Carpenter, who believe that a state study will highlight failures and injustices and bolster support for changes in the law. The two saw the November election as a boon to their effort. Democrats, who almost unanimously supported the study bill, broadened their advantage in the Assembly by five seats and in the Senate by two seats. Among the victors was Sen.-elect Joe Dunn of Santa Ana, who has attended FACTS gatherings and supports three-strikes changes. Perhaps more importantly, Democrat Gray Davis is replacing Wilson. "I'm pretty confident Davis would sign this," Carpenter said of the study bill. Davis spokesman Michael Bustamante said Davis had no position on the issue at this time. A LAW BORN OF VIOLENCE The three-strikes law was passed in 1994 after the highly publicized case of 12-year-old Polly Klass, who was kidnapped and murdered in Petaluma the previous year by a career criminal with two previous kidnapping convictions. "Polly Klaas was on everyone's lips," said Mike Reynolds, who spearheaded the initiative drive for the law. Reynolds' own daughter was killed in a botched purse snatching in 1993. Again, the killer was a career criminal. (Klass' father, Marc Klaas, opposed the ballot measure.) The law was co-sponsored by three Orange County legislators, including Sen. Rob Hurtt, R-Garden Grove, who was defeated by Dunn last month. It was passed by the state Legislature and approved in the polls by 72 percent of voters statewide and 80 percent in Orange County. "We had made a mistake somewhere along the road in letting criminals out of jail too easily," said Reynolds. "We're saying to criminals, 'if you've done two strikes, you've got to stop doing crime.' The people who don't like it are the criminals, their families and their attorneys." California was the second state to pass a three-strikes law, and about two dozen states have followed suit. But California's version remains the toughest - nowhere else can a nonviolent third strike send an criminal to prison for life. This means that shoplifting with a prior offense or drug possession can count as a third strike. "My daughter was killed by a purse snatcher," said Reynolds. "Is purse snatching a violent offense?" District attorneys have the choice of whether to seek a third-strike conviction, and judges can downgrade the sentences sought by prosecutors, a safety valve that Reynolds says protects those who don't deserve the third-strike sentence. A 1997 study by The Orange County Register found that county judges reduced sentencing in 71 percent of the 175 three-strikes cases they had considered. Just five of those reductions were for violent crimes. DIFFERENT SIDES, DIFFERENT STUDIES In Wilson's veto message for the three-strikes study bill, the governor quoted a Rand Corp. report projecting a 21 percent decrease in crime attributable to the law. Reynolds prefers a report not mentioned by Wilson, one issued by Attorney General Dan Lungren, a staunch advocate of the law. It attributed much of the state's 31 percent decline in crime from 1994 to 1997 to three strikes. Critics point out the decline in crime started before the law was enacted and say Lungren downplayed other factors, including demographics and the tailing off of the rock-cocaine trade. Assemblyman Dick Ackerman, R-Fullerton, says enough studies have been done and more time under the law is needed before a conclusive examination is possible. "It's a somewhat harsh law, but it's having its desired effect," Acherman said. "Every time you pass a law, it's not going to fit every case." Brewer and Baugh disagree with Ackerman that no further study is needed now. Brewer said she is particularly concerned about letters she's received from criminals whose first two strikes were 20 or 30 years ago and who are facing 25 years in prison because of a nonviolent third offense. "This study would be from a different source, and it may be more centrist (than Lungren's)," Brewer said. The study proposed this year would also have examined unanticipated state costs. While Lungren argued that the law actually saved the state money, the Rand study predicted that the increase in prison building and operations would cost the state $5.5 billion annually. Critics point to private studies that say drug rehabilitation and high school programs for at-risk teens are more cost-effective than the current three-strikes law, and say that's another reason for change. "We're bankrupting the state both morally and economically," Carpenter said. But while there is sufficient support in the Legislature for a study, actual changes will be tougher to achieve. Amending the law requires a two-thirds majority of the Legislature, but some activists believe that might be an easier route than an initiative asking voters to water down three strikes. FROM TOUGH LOVE TO HEARTBREAK When Shane Reams was 17, he robbed a neighbor's house. Four years later, he robbed two more neighbors' houses. His mother says she persuaded Shane to turn himself in. He spent 18 months in prison. "I was practicing tough love," Sue Reams said. "I thought he needed help and this would show him. But when he came out of prison, boy, he'd changed from being a young man to somebody who knew about prison life. He's learned more about drugs and crime in prison than he has out her." At 25, Shane Reams was convicted for being the middleman in a $20 sale of rock cocaine. At 28, he was convicted of his third strike for standing lookout while a friend sold two-tenths of a gram of rock cocaine to an undercover agent. There was no evidence linking him to other sales. His friend, who didn't face the three-strikes law, was released after two years. "It's heartbreaking," said Sue Reams. "And I feel a lot of guilt, because I was so rigid with him. He's not a mean, violent person. He's a gentle person. Somebody said we're angry at them, not because we're afraid of them. I don't think that's right. WHO'S STRIKING OUT? Under the state's 4-year-old three-strikes law, third-time felons can be locked up for 25 years to life. As of March 31, 4,076 felons had been sent to prison on the law's sentencing guidelines, mostly for nonviolent offenses. Here's a breakdown of the third-strike offenses for those sentenced under the law: Crimes against persons:38% Property Crimes: 33.2% Drug Crimes: 18.8% Other Crimes: 8.7% Unknown: 1.2% THE 'THREE STRIKE'S' LAW The law passed by the state legislature and California voters in 1994 called for a mandatory sentence of 25 years to life for anyone with two "serious or violent" felony convictions who is convicted of a third felony. In 1996, the Supreme Court ruled that judges can ignore a defendant's prior convictions if they believe a sentence of 25 years to life would be too severe. Prosecutors also have discretion not to seek third-strike convictions. The first two "serious or violent" felonies range from residential burglary to murder. The third strike applies to all felonies, including possession of small quantities of illegal drugs, petty theft, receiving stolen property and forgery. The law also mandates a sentence double that otherwise required by law for anyone with a single "serious or violent" felony who is then convicted of a second felony. CASE EXAMPLES Some who seek to amend "three-strikes, you're out" use these four cases as examples of unjust administration of the law. Jerry DeWayne Williams, who had earlier served time for robbery and attempted robbery, initially was sentenced to 25 years to life for stealing a $2 slice of pizza in Redondo Beach. The sentence was reduced on appeal. Kevin T. Weber, who had two residential burglary convictions, broke into a Santa Ana restaurant and came away with four cookies and a sentence of 25 years to life. Russell Benson's first two strikes originated from a single knife attack, so when he stole a carton of cigarettes from Target, he got a 15-to-life sentence. Stephan Dewayne Edwards, who had two burglary convictions, was entenced to 15 years to life when he was caught in Santa Ana with one-third of a gram of rock cocaine, but his sentence was reduced on appeal. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry