Baltimore Sun

Nominee vows prosecutor­ial changes

Democrat to seek more cooperatio­n with police without shunning reforms

- By Lee O. Sanderlin

Ivan Bates, the Democratic nominee for Baltimore state’s attorney, said all of Baltimore can agree on one thing: “Everyone wants a safer city.”

Speaking Monday at his first news conference since becoming the nominee, Bates promised to reduce the violent crime plaguing Baltimore neighborho­ods, but said in doing so he will need help from law enforcemen­t and City Hall.

“Right now, Baltimore, we’re in our silos,” Bates said. “We’re fighting, we’re not fighting together. We fight together, we can win together.”

Officially, Bates has to win the general election in November against defense attorney Roya Hanna, who is running as an independen­t. The city’s voters have elected the Democratic candidate every election since 1920.

Bates already has some support in City Hall, with attendees at Monday’s news conference including Baltimore city councilmen Zeke Cohen and Yitzy Schleifer, as well as city Comptrolle­r Bill Henry.

Cohen said the city’s residents “breathed a collective sigh of relief ” when they found out Bates, and not incumbent State’s Attorney

Marilyn Mosby or former prosecutor Thiru Vignarajah, was going to win the primary.

“Baltimore is in a moment of uncertaint­y,” Cohen said Monday. “We know we have real challenges in our city. We know violence has been a constant over the past

few years, and we know that there is one person that is positioned to take this office and completely transform it and make it into something that is not only functional, but that is effective.”

Friday evening, shortly after being declared the primary winner, Bates spoke with Mayor Brandon Scott on the phone. The pair will hold future meetings to make sure they are on the same page when it comes to the city’s strategy for reducing crime, Bates said Monday.

Baltimore has recorded more than 2,500 homicides since 2015, including more than 200 so far this year. In addition to the city’s crime rates, current and former city officials pointed to a state’s attorney’s office that is so understaff­ed with prosecutor­s it cannot effectivel­y prosecute the cases it has. Bates has said rebuilding the office is his top priority.

Bates’ relationsh­ip with the Baltimore Police Department will be crucial in effectivel­y prosecutin­g cases. He said Monday the department and the state’s attorney’s office have to work together to make sure cases are thorough and together before the decision to charge is made.

The Baltimore City Fraternal Order of Police, the department’s union, has long been one of Mosby’s most vocal critics, and Mosby supporters said they think officers may not work as hard because of their dislike for her.

“He understand­s how important it is to work collaborat­ively with our law enforcemen­t partners in a way that is effective in fighting crime,” former city state’s attorney Gregg Bernstein said of Bates.

Bates has promised to crack down on drug dealing and gun possession, and plans to seek mandatory prison sentences for people convicted on gun charges.

“We are putting the criminal element on notice: It’s no more probation,” he said. “We win [at trial], you will go to prison and for a significan­t amount of time.”

Bates has promised to repeal or nullify most of Mosby’s core prosecutio­n policies on his first day in office. Mosby stopped the prosecutio­n of simple drug possession, trespassin­g and prostituti­on.

But Bates said just because his office will begin prosecutin­g misdemeano­rs again does not mean the city is returning to

“We are putting the criminal element on notice: It’s no more probation.” — Ivan Bates, Democratic nominee for state’s attorney

the tough-on-crime mindset that caused mass incarcerat­ion of Black residents and enabled the unconstitu­tional policing that brought a consent decree down on the Baltimore Police Department.

He plans to funnel many cases into diversion courts in an effort connect people with services and treatment as an alternativ­e to traditiona­l prosecutio­n where the outcome is often a conviction and a period of incarcerat­ion.

Former mayor Sheila Dixon said she thinks Bates is the kind of leader who will put ego aside and try to make solutions-oriented policy.

“We need consistenc­y,” she said. “And we need to look at what works and what doesn’t work, and we need to build on those things and not throw it out because it was somebody else’s idea.”

 ?? KEVIN RICHARDSON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Defense attorney Ivan Bates, left, who won the Democratic primary for Baltimore’s top prosecutor, shares a laugh with former Baltimore state’s attorney Gregg L. Bernstein at Bates’ Baltimore campaign headquarte­rs.
KEVIN RICHARDSON/BALTIMORE SUN Defense attorney Ivan Bates, left, who won the Democratic primary for Baltimore’s top prosecutor, shares a laugh with former Baltimore state’s attorney Gregg L. Bernstein at Bates’ Baltimore campaign headquarte­rs.

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