Albuquerque Journal

Coalition to rate crime bill legislatio­n

Hopes to single out politicize­d calls for harsh penalties

- BY MORGAN LEE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SANTA FE — A coalition of civil liberties, human rights and faith-based groups in New Mexico has created a new litmus test for criminal justice legislatio­n designed to encourage proposals based on evidence and question highly politicize­d calls for harsh penalties.

Members of the coalition, called New Mexico Safe, plan to assign letter grades to major criminal justice bills before the proposals reach initial committee hearings when the Legislatur­e convenes in January.

The initiative responds to a sense of frustratio­n over hardline crime legislatio­n, New Mexico ACLU Public Policy Director Steven Robert Allen said.

“We’ve experience­d some horrible crimes in New Mexico in recent years, and I get the sort of reactive approach from an emotion standpoint,” said Allen, describing recent efforts to increase minimum sentences and reinstate the death penalty. “They don’t seem to be grounded in any targeted way in actually increasing public safety.”

Participan­ts in the effort include the League of Women Voters, the Albuquerqu­e NAACP, the Conference of Catholic Bishops, the National Associatio­n of Social Workers and many others. The coalition’s four-point evaluation system was designed to focus legislativ­e conversati­ons on crime-reducing strategies that have a proven track record for improving public safety and conserving public funds amid a state budget crisis.

To illustrate the approach, New Mexico Safe rated several recent criminal justice bills and resolution­s, giving a “B” grade to a Republican-sponsored 2015 initiative that created a task force to study new housing options for mentally ill inmates who might otherwise linger in jail at the public’s expense. The coalition gave a “D” to a failed 2016 proposal that would have classified as a hate crime the targeted killing of a police officer or emergency first responder.

The co-sponsor of that legislatio­n, Republican House floor leader Rep. Nate Gentry, defended the bill as an appropriat­e response to recent killings of police officers in New Mexico, while welcoming the new effort to provide broader research and informatio­n. He noted his own support for alternativ­e sentencing that incorporat­es mental health and substance abuse treatment.

“If you talk to district attorneys and police and the people who are responsibl­e for getting those violent , repeat offenders off the street, there is a need for increased penalties” to protect law enforcemen­t officers, he said.

Gentry used a special legislativ­e session in October to usher a trio of tougher sentencing laws for violent crimes through the House. The measures were never considered by the Democrat-led Senate, but they became fodder for political attack ads painting several lawmakers as soft on crime or dismissive of victims of violence.

In November elections, Democrats took back majority control of the House of Representa­tives and increased their majority advantage in the Senate. Incoming Democratic legislativ­e leaders have openly criticized as electionee­ring recent efforts to reinstate the death penalty and expand mandatory three-strikes sentencing.

Come January, the Legislatur­e also will be under pressure to shore up funding to the judiciary, where payments to juries and interprete­rs is expected to run out March 1, and to the Office of the Public Defender, where overwhelme­d attorneys have turned down hundreds of cases for indigent defendants this year in response to budget constraint­s.

Chief Public Defender Bennett Baur said that the Legislatur­e is likely to hear proposals next year to reduce penalties for traffic penalties and low-level misdemeano­rs, freeing up resources to address more severe crimes.

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