Pubdate: Mon, 15 Feb 1999 Source: Times Union (NY) Copyright: 1999, Capital Newspapers Division of The Hearst Corporation Contact: http://www.timesunion.com/ Fax: 518-454-5628 DRUG REFORM: IT'S TIME New York state's chief judge leads the way in addressing the inequities of the Rockefeller laws A fter 25 years, it's hard to find anyone who still believes in the deterrent effect of the Rockefeller drug laws. While those laws were intended to make New York state a national model of zero tolerance for drug crime, they have instead become an occasion of too many miscarriages of justice. Far from locking up drug kingpins and ridding the streets of pushers, as they were intended to do, they have more often than not fallen on low-level offenders who are serving Draconian sentences for nonviolent crimes. Now comes the chief judge of New York, Judith Kaye, with a welcome reform proposal that would inject a measure of judicial discretion into these rigid statutes. As the state's highest judicial officer, her views carry special significance. Specifically, she would empower the state's appellate judges to review and reduce sentences when warranted. These cases would involve so-called A-1 offenses that cover the sale of two ounces, or the possession of four ounces, of hard drugs. Under the Rockefeller laws, those convicted of A-1 offenses must serve a 15-year-to-life sentence. Under Judge Kaye's proposal, the appellate court could reduce the minimum sentence to five years. Just as encouraging, Judge Kaye is proposing that drug treatment play a larger role in the process, as an alternative to incarceration. Under her plan, a larger number of addicts charged with low-level offenses would be eligible to postpone prosecution and prison by agreeing to complete a drug treatment program. And in cases where the charges involve selling or possessing minute quantities of drugs, the accused could be eligible for drug treatment instead of prison, if both the prosecutor and trial judge consent. Besides providing for an alternative to harsh sentences, Judge Kaye's plan also has the potential to relieve prison overcrowding if enough defendants are found to be eligible for alternatives to incarceration. Some estimates say as many as 10,000 low-level offenders might qualify each year to defer prosecution and prison. Yet there are drawbacks. While it's true that A-1 offenders are subject to the harshest punishment mandated by the Rockefeller laws, the number of such cases is low. Of more than 9,000 drug cases tried last year, only 45 were in the A-1 category. Moreover, reducing sentences to five years might be too harsh in some circumstances, but the appellate judges will have no way to recommend speedier release. Finally, there is the question of allowing prosecutors to decide who could receive treatment instead of jail, and who would not. Prosecutors already have wide discretion in determining which cases to try. Moreover, they often strike plea deals with defendants who cooperate with police. Why, then, enhance these considerable powers with a new authority to determine what sentence an accused drug offender might face? That discretion should remain the judge's alone. Reservations aside, however, Judge Kaye's proposal is a welcome beginning toward returning sanity, not to mention justice, to the drug war. Gov. Pataki and the state Legislature should lend their support. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck