Chattanooga Times Free Press

Criminal justice shows split in governor’s race

- BY CHRISTIAN BOONE AND GREG BLUESTEIN NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

ATLANTA — If Nathan Deal has a lasting legacy from his eight years in office, it may very well be his criminal justice initiative. The governor’s push to steer nonviolent offenders away from costly prison beds toward rehabilita­tion programs has gained national renown and rewritten the tough-on-crime Republican playbook.

But his potential successors have wildly different plans that will continue to reshape how punishment will be meted out in Georgia’s courts.

Democrat Stacey Abrams wants to eliminate cash bail and move toward decriminal­izing some marijuana offenses. Republican Brian Kemp believes it’s time to adopt a crackdown on gangs and funnel vast new resources into law enforcemen­t.

While neither candidate said they want to undo Deal’s work, Kemp and several other candidates down the ballot have seized on a starker law-and-order narrative that echoes the tough talk from U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions and other “law and order” conservati­ves.

“Kemp is selling what Sessions is selling — a return to an aggressive, proactive, zero-tolerance approach,” said Dean Dabney, a criminal justice professor at Georgia State University.

That model requires a reliable villain, and increasing­ly in 2018, candidates are warning of a rise in gang-related violence threatenin­g communitie­s with drive-by shootings and barbaric assaults.

It’s a theme that’s also emerged in the race for Georgia’s top law enforcemen­t job.

Republican Attorney General Chris Carr recently held a roundtable to highlight the rise of organized crime, while his Democratic opponent, Charlie Bailey, has pledged to create a state unit to target gang members and press for more cash to hire prosecutor­s.

And further down the ballot, from courthouse jobs to Gold Dome positions, candidates are wrestling with how to balance those two approaches. Matthew Krull, a Republican solicitor running for re-election in Douglas County, said the community is struggling with a surge of violence from Mexican and Central American gangs.

“I’m a tough-on-crime kind of guy, and if someone commits violent crimes, I have no problem putting them in jail,” Krull said.

“But I do see a change in our approach to nonviolent offenses,” he said. “My voters are tired of seeing people put away in the criminal justice system without having a way out. And it does absolutely none of us any good not to try to help them reform.”

A razor-edged approach to crime used to be the norm in Georgia politics. Zell Miller campaigned for re-election as governor in 1994 with the help of a popular “Two Strikes” law that increased prison sentences and mandated life sentences with no parole for the second conviction for many violent offenses.

And Sonny Perdue’s most significan­t criminal justice initiative­s as governor involved changes making it easier for victims of crime to receive financial restitutio­n and giving prosecutor­s as many opportunit­ies as defense attorneys to reject potential jurors in criminal cases.

David McDade, who at the time was the Douglas County district attorney, said it “answered the prayers prosecutor­s and crime victims had been offering for years.”

Then came Deal, who cited rising state incarcerat­ion costs and high recidivism rates to spearhead legislatio­n over two terms that remade the state’s court system.

The initiative­s, passed with overwhelmi­ngly bipartisan support, steered more nonviolent offenders away from prison and toward accountabi­lity courts and other programs. More state funding and resources poured into rehabilita­tion programs, and judges were granted new sentencing flexibilit­y on some crimes.

Deal touted the results during a recent prison roundtable with President Donald Trump, noting a 10 percent decrease in violent crime since he was first elected governor.

“We have seen our African-American percentage in our prison system drop significan­tly,” Deal said. “Our AfricanAme­rican commitment­s to our prison is at the lowest level it has been since 1987. And in states like ours, we have a disproport­ionate number of minorities in our prison versus our population as a whole.”

Kemp and Abrams both support Deal’s overall criminal justice initiative, with Abrams highlighti­ng her legislativ­e work on committees that helped form the law. And both also are open to expanding the state’s medical marijuana program to allow the in-state cultivatio­n of the drug — a notion the governor has long resisted.

And that’s about where their similariti­es on criminal justice issues end.

Abrams wants to end capital punishment and reduce penalties on some drug offenses. She would also expand the “ban the box” program to make it easier for some released inmates to land jobs and decriminal­ize low-level violations now treated as misdemeano­rs.

At the heart of her program is a plan to eliminate the cash bail system, asserting that any program that keeps “people in jail because they are poor is wealth-based discrimina­tion.” It mirrors policies embraced by Atlanta and other Georgia cities that recently approved citywide restrictio­ns on cash bonds.

She hopes her priorities will force the state toward a reckoning that Deal helped spark.

“Do we want to be the Georgia that goes backward to mass incarcerat­ion?” asked Abrams, who was once the state House’s top Democrat. “Or go forward and eliminate the stories of Georgia leaving behind its best and brightest?”

Kemp, the secretary of state, said his office’s law enforcemen­t arm and his work with sheriffs on courthouse security have given him a sharply different perspectiv­e on the debate. His “public safety reform” involves a tough anti-gang crackdown and a new approach to illegal immigratio­n.

In language echoing Trump’s criminal justice policy, Kemp’s “stop and dismantle” program would pour more state funding into a state effort created in 2010 to monitor gang members and launch a public awareness campaign on the dangers of gang-related crime.

Another tenet of his plan is a “criminal alien database” to track unauthoriz­ed immigrants who have committed crimes and to try to speed their deportatio­ns. He’d do that by requiring law enforcemen­t officials to transport people in the country illegally to a federal facility for deportatio­n if they’ve committed a crime — something the law doesn’t currently mandate.

“On the campaign trail, I keep hearing that we’ve got to do something with these problems. And Georgia has become a distributi­on hub to the Mexican drug cartel,” Kemp said. “That’s what I’m focusing on, and that’s part of what our campaign is about: We’re trying to help protect people, and we need to be working at the local and state level.”

It’s not clear whether the gang problem is as pervasive as Kemp suggests. Of the 98 murders last year in DeKalb County, 10 were gang-related.

Dabney, the Georgia State criminolog­ist, said much depends on whether gangs are defined as large, organized crime units or neighborho­od-centric groups that may commit crimes but often don’t have any sophistica­ted hierarchy. Still, he added, there could be a political benefit to raising the specter of rising crime.

“If you can get someone scared enough,” Dabney said, “they’ll vote for you.”

Law enforcemen­t leaders often have a different perspectiv­e. Police say those 10 gang-related murders in DeKalb are a problem that extends beyond the county line.

“Gangs do not respect jurisdicti­onal or municipal boundaries. They pose a threat to everyone in Georgia, and the most vulnerable are Georgia’s poor children,” said Marietta Police Chief Dan Flynn, who added he’ll back “any initiative that will help us interrupt organized gangs and arrest criminal gang members.”

For law enforcemen­t officers, who tend to lean to the right, the tough-oncrime talk is more philosophi­cal than political.

“We want more accountabi­lity for people who break the law, not less,” said Terry Norris, the executive director of the Georgia Sheriffs’ Associatio­n. It’s why he and others are wary of Democratic calls to eliminate cash bail. Without any skin in the game, he said, defendants pose a greater flight risk.

“Many prisoners do pose a continuing threat, whether they are wealthy or poor,” Flynn said. “Judges and court systems should retain the right to set bail in the interest of public safety as opposed to social equity.”

Data are inconclusi­ve about the effectiven­ess of the for-profit bond approach, used in Georgia and a majority of states. Four states have outlawed commercial bail bonds, and a bill that would completely eliminate bail for suspects awaiting trial — replacing it with a risk assessment program — narrowly passed the California Assembly last week.

Law enforcemen­t is also wary of decriminal­ization of some drug offenses. Flynn said he would support accountabi­lity courts separating drug addicts from dealers. Addicts are forced to enter a treatment program and, if they successful­ly complete the program and stay clean, they can avoid jail time.

“It is not true that narcotic drug law violations are nonviolent crimes,” Flynn said. “There is credible data that shows drug crime is directly related to as much as 75 percent of all crime and drug law has been promulgate­d over many years as part of overall means to reduce all crime.”

Both strategies carry a high price tag. The proactive model favored by Kemp has already proved to be costly and doesn’t always produce the intended results, said Dabney, the Georgia State professor. But the approach favored by Abrams and other Democrats relies on the efficacy of follow-up programs.

“It’ll be slow-moving, and you’ll likely see some high-profile failures,” Dabney said.

Deal has a different idea in mind. In a recent interview, the governor sounded almost wistful about the next phase once he leaves office. Though he supports Kemp, he said he hoped whoever wins will keep the criminal justice council he formed and consider another major step — reducing or eliminatin­g more mandatory minimum sentences.

He singled out legislatio­n approved in 2006 that requires prison sentences of at least 25 years for some sex crimes. That law had broad bipartisan support — then-Lt. Gov. Mark Taylor, a Democrat, called it the most important measure of that legislativ­e session — but Deal said in hindsight those standards were “excessivel­y long.”

“That will be a heavy lift, it will be a difficult thing to do,” he said, “but it’s time that we did that.”

 ??  ?? Stacey Abrams Brian Kemp
Stacey Abrams Brian Kemp
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Nathan Deal

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