Baltimore Sun

State board scraps plan to expand AG’s office

Unit aimed to fight street crime in city falls to budget cuts

- By Tim Prudente and Yvonne Wenger

As part of $413 million in budget cuts prompted by the coronaviru­s pandemic, the state Board of Public Works scrapped plans to expand the Maryland attorney general’s office by adding a unit to prosecute street crime in Baltimore.

The budget department for Gov. Larry Hogan’s administra­tion recommende­d cutting the funding for the Baltimore City Violent Crime Prosecutio­n Division and abandoning plans to hire 25 people to staff the unit. Hogan and Democratic State Comptrolle­r Peter Franchot voted Wednesday at a meeting of the three-member board to approve the cut, saving the state about $2.5 million.

The division was a matter of much debate late last year and incited a monthslong, public dispute between the Republican governor and Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby, a Democrat.

Mosby was encouraged by the governor’s decision to vote against funding the unit, her spokeswoma­n said Thursday. Hogan had announced the plan last year for Frosh’s office to take on more

drug, gun and gang cases in Baltimore, and legislator­s in the Democratic-controlled General Assembly approved the money.

“We are encouraged by the governor’s recognitio­n that his proposed measure does not outweigh the need to support evidence-based, public safety and health programs that will actually reduce the scourge of gun violence in our city,” Mosby’s spokeswoma­n, Zy Richardson, wrote in a statement.

A spokesman for Hogan said the plan wasn’t off the table for future years, after the state’s revenues recover from the pandemic-induced economic crisis.

“The governor will certainly continue to press the legislatur­e on solutions to fight violent crime,” spokesman Mike Ricci wrote Thursday in an email.

Ricci said the division was included in the package of cuts because of “mixed support” for it from the attorney general. The office of Attorney General Brian Frosh, a Democrat, declined to comment.

The rampant street violence that has gripped Baltimore in recent years only worsened in 2020. The city had suffered16­5 killings as of Thursday, four more deaths than during the same record-setting months last year.

The board also voted to cut a grant of nearly $200,000 to Mosby’s office. Her staff members were working Thursday to understand the implicatio­ns of those cuts, Richardson said.

Other city and state officials were sorting Thursday through the board’s other cuts, trying to make sense of impacts to the general fund and grant programs.

City officials said the Hogan administra­tion’s original proposal would have included a loss of significan­t funding from the state, including $10 million that allows the city to pay pensions for teachers. But those cuts were withdrawn Wednesday, and Baltimore’s $3 billion operating budget seemed to be spared.

Nonprofit directors also were working to determine how their budgets will be affected. The cuts approved include a reduction in grant money for city programs to reduce and prevent street violence, such as an Outward Bound program for troubled youth and the Baltimore Child Abuse Center.

Adam Rosenberg, executive director of the center, anticipate­d a 10% cut to two state grants that help pay for school mentoring and support children exposed to violence.

“I’m grateful it’s only 10%,” Rosenberg said. “There are going to be painful cuts that are going to be made all over.”

After an initial review Thursday, the Baltimore Police Department had not identified any cuts affecting the department’s operations, police spokeswoma­n Lindsey Eldridge said.

Del. Luke Clippinger, a Baltimore Democrat and chair of the House Judiciary Committee, said the governor should have waited a few weeks to get more informatio­n on the state’s budget situation before his administra­tion proposed $672 million in cuts. For instance, people must file their Maryland income tax returns by July 15.

More time would have given officials clarity to make judgments and set priorities, he said.

“I don’t, for a second, question that we are in a bind,” Clippinger said.

Still, he said he was concerned by cuts to programs aimed at stemming the violence in Baltimore, particular­ly the loss of the new prosecutor­s in Frosh’s office. The attorney general’s prosecutio­ns are critical, he said, because they take on complex cases and criminal networks that span jurisdicti­ons.

“We have to do more to get out in front and stop the violent crime,” Clippinger said.

Hogan announced the plan last year for the new division in the attorney general’s office, saying he wanted to see Frosh hire two dozen prosecutor­s and staff to tackle city violence. Hogan said Mosby’s office was too quick to drop cases and agree to “excessivel­y lenient plea deals.”

“Far too often in Baltimore City, violent offenders get a slap on the wrist and are released back out on the streets to commit another violent offense,” Hogan wrote in a letter, directing Frosh to step in.

In response, Frosh said he had eight people currently prosecutin­g crimes, but could do more with a bigger staff. The state budget Hogan submitted in January sought to fund the new division, and Frosh said then that he welcomed the support.

The plan, however, did not sit well with Mosby.

“I think that it’s problemati­c, to be quite candid with you, to have two local prosecutor’s offices essentiall­y prosecutin­g the same types of crimes,” she said at the time.

In a letter to lawmakers, Mosby defended her record and urged them to oppose the new division. During a hearing on the funding bill, she said: “Tougher sentences, more prosecutor­s, more police is not going to reduce violence in the city.”

Hogan posted that quote to Facebook, along with a comment: “The person responsibl­e for prosecutin­g crime in Baltimore City is opposing our crime initiative­s to reduce violent crime.” His post received more than1,000 comments, many disparagin­g Mosby.

Within weeks, the coronaviru­s broke out and Hogan issued a stay-at-home order to control the spread of COVID-19. That resulted in hundreds of millions of dollars in lost revenue from income and sales taxes.

Hogan’s budget department proposed last week the $672 million in cuts, but Franchot and Democratic State Treasurer Nancy Kopp objected Tuesday to $205 million of those proposals. The administra­tion deferred those cuts the next day, and Hogan and Franchot then approved the more than $413 million in reductions, including $1.6 million that was to go to the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and more than $131 million intended for higher education.

Reporters Pamela Wood and Luke Broadwater contribute­d to this article.

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