Pubdate: Fri, 19 Mar 1999 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 1999 Associated Press Author: Laurie Kellman $17.5B GOP ANTI-CRIME BILL UNVEILED WASHINGTON (AP) Millions of dollars in crime-fighting grants to local law enforcement would be preserved and tougher penalties for drug traffickers imposed under a $17.5 billion bill unveiled today, Senate Republicans said. "It is based on what we know reduces crime," said Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, chairman of the Judiciary Committee. Hatch clashed with Attorney General Janet Reno last week on her proposal to cut several anti-crime grants from her budget proposal. Reno said crime was down significantly nationwide, and she wanted to shift money to other priorities. But Hatch said Friday that crime in the United States is still "significantly high by historical standards," and violent crime rates here remain the highest of any industrialized nation. Much of the funding in Hatch's "21st Century Justice Act" is set aside for grant programs Reno wants eliminated, the chairman told reporters. The programs in dispute are: The Local Law Enforcement Block Grant Program, which congressional Republicans first proposed in their 1994 election blueprint, the "Contract With America." Since 1996, the program has provided more than $1 billion a year to state and local governments for equipment and technology. Truth-in-sentencing grants, which would give states some $700 million a year to build prisons to house violent and repeat criminals for at least 85 percent of their sentences. Many states, Hatch said, already have changed their laws to accommodate the program. The Juvenile Accountability Incentive Block Grant, which would give states $450 million a year to build detention centers, perform drug testing and improve record-keeping for young offenders. Senate GOP leadership sources who requested anonymity said the GOP bill marks a new willingness among some senior Republicans to take on legislative initiatives that approach the gun-control issue. Republicans, many of whom have opposed such legislation in recent years, feared they would lose such a battle after nationally publicized firearm tragedies at schools and elsewhere. Hatch's agenda, however, faces little risk of igniting a gun battle because it focuses primarily on the prosecutions, GOP sources said. It would expand a Richmond, Va., program in which the U.S. attorney prosecutes as many local gun-related crimes in federal court as possible and seeks federal mandatory minimum sentences. Hatch said homicides in Richmond dropped 50 percent after that program took effect. The legislation also includes a media campaign to spread the message that "an illegal gun will get you five years in federal prison." Hatch said he plans a hearing on Monday on firearms prosecutions. The bill also would: Extend federal laws against the murder of state and local law enforcement officers to the murder by federal detainees of state corrections officers. Add criminal penalties for recruiting minors for "a criminal street gang" and toughen penalties for witness intimidation. Add penalties for teaching bomb-making on the Internet. Provide state and local governments the resources and authority to address emerging high-tech and international crime. Raise penalties for powder cocaine and methamphetamine offenses, and make criminals liable for the cost of cleanup of their methamphetamine labs. - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry