Pubdate: Sun, 11 Apr 1999 Source: Newsday (NY) Copyright: 1999, Newsday Inc. Contact: (516)843-2986 Website: http://www.newsday.com/ LOSING BATTLE TO REVISE DRUG LAW Political Factors Hobble Effort To Soften 1973 Rockefeller Acts Albany - They've rallied on the Capitol steps, trotted out teary-eyed children of drug defendants and enlisted the state's top judge in their cause. Yet even as they have stepped up their campaign this legislative session, advocates of overhauling New York's stiff Rockefeller-era drug laws have not convinced top lawmakers and Gov. George Pataki, whose support is essential to any major change. Because of a confluence of political factors, observers say, there is virtually no chance the laws will be repealed soon and only a slim chance they will even be modified. And the only proposal being seriously considered, from Chief Judge Judith Kaye of the State Court of Appeals, is seen by critics as providing political cover to tinker with the laws without making serious changes. The reasons for the deadlock, elected officials say, include the continuing opposition of Senate Republicans intent on keeping crime rates low and building prisons; a change in Pataki's position that some believe is linked to his national ambitions; and the reluctance of top Democrats to tackle an issue they say was used as recently as last year to label them as soft on crime. "I would be thrilled if people were seriously discussing repeal of the Rockefeller drug laws, but they're not," said Charles Adler, a criminal defense lawyer lobbying to change the laws on behalf of the New York City Bar Association. "The issue of drugs is very important for politicians, and there is no incentive for them to make these changes." Passed by the Legislature in 1973, the laws are the legacy of Gov. Nelson Rockefeller's crackdown on drugs through severe mandatory sentences. They require, for example, a 15-years-to-life sentence for anyone convicted of selling two ounces of cocaine. Judges cannot soften the punishments. The aim of the laws was to reduce drug-related crime, and proponents say they remain an effective tool for prosecutors. But critics contend the laws are too harsh, have flooded prisons with low-level offenders and have failed to stop the proliferation of drugs. And a statewide poll released late last month showed that 69 percent of New Yorkers favor giving judges sentencing discretion, which contradicts the central tenet of the Rockefeller laws. The poll, with a margin of error of plus or minus 3.3 percentage points, was conducted for the New York Law Journal by the Quinnipiac College Polling Institute. In the past year, the laws' 25th anniversary has led to a crescendo of calls for overhauling them from inmate advocacy and civil rights groups, religious leaders and even some Republican senators who voted for them. Their cause was aided, some advocates believe, by Kaye, who urged earlier this year that appellate judges be allowed to reduce some minimum sentences in which they find a "miscarriage of justice" and that some nonviolent offenders should be sent to treatment programs instead of prison, if the judge and prosecutor consent. "It's very important that Judge Kaye has weighed into the struggle," said Assemb. Jeffrion Aubry (D-East Elmhurst), who has proposed eliminating mandatory sentencing entirely. Other advocates of change, however, dismiss Kaye's proposals as minor because of the involvement of prosecutors, who tend to favor prison over treatment. "This plays beautifully into Republican hands," said one New York judge who requested anonymity. "Are we better off with a bill that requires prosecutors' consent? No. Maybe worse because now the Republicans can walk away and say we did Rockefeller reform, and you'll never see any other changes." David Bookstaver, a spokesman for Kaye, who was appointed by Democratic Gov. Mario Cuomo in 1993, said the judge's proposals were "apolitical" and intended to spark debate. Katherine Lapp, Pataki's commissioner of criminal justice, said Pataki is considering a plan to change the laws "along the lines of Judge Kaye's proposal." But she said the governor opposes any major overhaul, which he thinks "would only make the crime rate go back up." Four years ago, Pataki called for seriously softening the laws by giving judges leeway to sentence some non-violent drug offenders to treatment or community service rather than prison. But he backed away almost immediately, never throwing the weight of his office behind an overhaul and not pursuing any major changes in the years since. Numerous political observers say Pataki won't approve any serious changes now because he wants to court conservative voters if he runs for national office. Lapp denied that. "No one is playing politics, and no one is conspiring with anyone to get off the hook," she said. But Pataki's Republican colleagues who control the Senate have long opposed revising the Rockefeller laws, and there is little indication that sentiment has changed. "Repeal? That's impossible. Could there be injustices? We're looking at that, but I don't believe the laws are too harsh," said Sen. Dale Volker (R- Depew), who chairs the Codes Committee, which would consider any changes. "The level of violence in this state is down dramatically, and we're not going to upset the apple cart if we can help it." The tough-on-crime imperative has also weakened support for Rockefeller reform in the Democrat-dominated Assembly. Speaker Sheldon Silver (D-Manhattan) last year proposed attaching a Rockefeller revision to Jenna's Law, which ended parole for a broad class of first-time felons. But Silver withdrew the proposal, Democratic sources said, after opposition from Pataki and the parents of Jenna Grieshaber, the murdered Albany woman for whom the law was named. And because of the political barrage Silver endured as a result, said one Democratic lawmaker, "There's a bad taste left about the whole discussion, so I think there is a gunshyness." The lawmaker and other Democrats said that with Pataki and the Senate Republicans hardening their positions, and Assembly Democrats unwilling to take the lead, the most influential calls for significant changes in the laws are coming from former Republican senators who voted for them at the time. A spokeswoman for Silver would say only: "We are reviewing Judge Kaye's proposal and awaiting the governor's." One of the Republican senators who voted for the original bills and is campaigning to overhaul them, John Dunne of Garden City, acknowledged the difficulties that lie ahead. "We have no illusions," said Dunne, who is now a private attorney in Albany. "This is going to be a very tough battle. But it's one worth waging." - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry