Journal-Advocate (Sterling)

Democrats fight over a human-traffickin­g bill

- By Nick Coltrain and Seth Klamann Medianews Group

Long-simmering tensions between some Colorado House and Senate Democrats boiled out into public this month when Sen. Dylan Roberts accused the lower chamber of continuall­y underminin­g “provictim” legislatio­n.

At hand was a bill to strengthen laws against human traffickin­g. The Senate version sought to classify the crime as automatica­lly violent, which would make it subject to tougher sentencing guidelines. House lawmakers narrowed that provision and inserted language that would allow victims who later were drawn into traffickin­g to better defend themselves in court.

For Roberts, the change was an acute example of ideologica­l maneuverin­g by a key House committee. For him, the broader language made the punishment commensura­te with the “heinous” crime and acknowledg­ed the coercive, inherently violent nature of human traffickin­g.

“This Senate has continuous­ly sent good criminal justice bills to the House, only to see them significan­tly weakened by the House Judiciary Committee,” Roberts, a former prosecutor who lives in Frisco, said in a floor speech last week.

The flashpoint reflects intraparty tensions that have lingered between the progressiv­e House and the more moderate Senate since last year. The split has surfaced not just between the judiciary committees and on criminal justice bills, but also has been evident on housing policy.

House lawmakers defended their work on the human traffickin­g bill and on justice issues more broadly. While Roberts, a key swing vote on the Senate Judiciary Committee, is generally more aligned with law enforcemen­t’s positions, many House Democrats have made well known their aversion to policies that would send more people to prison.

Both chambers have wide Democratic majorities, but at times each has acted as a check on the other, often to the frustratio­n of lawmakers and their allies who get caught in the middle.

One House Democrat last year, voicing the irritation of many progressiv­es, quipped that the Senate “is where our dreams go to die.” Rep. Jennifer Bacon, a Denver Democrat, referred to the Senate as the “red room of death” — a nod to its red walls and carpet. More sweeping legislatio­n typically is introduced in the House, while lobbyists who seek to blunt or kill reform often train their focus on the Senate.

Progressiv­e Democrats in the House say they may disagree — bitterly — with the Senate’s approach, but that’s the system.

And it cuts both ways. “If we were mad about the Senate, then we should just want a single-chamber legislatur­e, and we don’t have that. We have two chambers for a reason,” said Bacon, who serves as vice chair of the House Judiciary Committee. “And even though we hate it, it’s for (things) like this” — difference­s in approach.

“Yeah, it makes me mad,” she added. “But you know what? I’m not going to be mad at the constituti­on. I think there are other things that we can work on to help each other. At the end of the day, this is also still politics.”

Part of the difference between the House and Senate committees can be attributed to simple math, lawmakers said: The House Judiciary Committee holds an 8-3 Democratic voting advantage, and several of its members are among the most progressiv­e legislator­s in the Capitol. Its Senate counterpar­t has a bare 3-2 majority — with Roberts, and his willingnes­s to shoot down bills that fly too far from his view of balance — given an effective veto.

The margins also highlight the different views of the lawmakers on the highprofil­e committees.

While Roberts told fellow senators that “pro-victim” bills had been “weakened” by House Judiciary in his speech, House members see things differentl­y. They counter that, perhaps — given the shades of gray inherent in many criminal proceeding­s and the country’s lengthy history of racial disparitie­s — they have a different idea of who could be a victim in America’s legal system.

“For too long, we’ve defined ‘victim’ as one type of person,” Rep. Leslie Herod, a Denver Democrat and member of the House committee, said in an interview. “… I think our definition of ‘victim’ is reflecting a broader understand­ing of who victims are in our communitie­s.”

Fight over human traffickin­g

Senate Bill 35 is the human traffickin­g legislatio­n that sparked Roberts’ ire.

The measure already had cleared the Senate when its House sponsors sought to tweak it in front of the House Judiciary Committee. They wanted to give traffickin­g victims who were later caught up in the traffickin­g of other people a chance to mount a better defense and not automatica­lly face lengthy sentences.

Majority Leader Monica Duran, a Wheat Ridge Democrat and the traffickin­g bill’s co-sponsor, said she supported the amendment — to assuage concerns from House Judiciary members but also because of feedback she’d received from survivors and advocates.

Because the House amended the bill, the Senate had to agree to the tweaks for it to pass. Sens. Byron Pelton and Rhonda Fields, the sponsors in that chamber, had urged their colleagues to accept the changes. Duran said she spoke with both of them before offering the amendment in committee.

Their motivation was not complete agreement with the amendments, Pelton said, but to keep the bill alive. (Pelton, a Sterling Republican, later mounted a separate protest against the changes by proposing a series of doomed, pro-prosecutio­n budget amendments.)

But Roberts instead called for a conference committee to force House and Senate members to hash out their difference­s on the bill. Fields, Pelton and the rest of the Senate agreed.

The House, however, did not — after Duran and her Republican co-sponsor, Rep. Ty Winter, defended the latest version of the bill on the House floor. The Senate ultimately accepted the House version, not wanting to lose other aspects of the bill over the fight.

Roberts remains unsatisfie­d.

He said the final bill was “still good work” that will help victims of human traffickin­g, but it could have been better — and he noted that the tougher Senate version passed that chamber on a 34-1 vote.

He’d hoped to find compromise, he said, adding: “I didn’t draw a hard line, the House did.”

“(The impasse) puts us in an impossible position of passing something that is marginally better for public safety and crime victims, but not everything that we could do — and not everything that I think reflects the conscience of the full legislatur­e,” Roberts said in an interview. In his view, bills clearing the committee “might only be representa­tive of a very small group of legislator­s on one committee in the House.”

Other crime and gun bills have died in House

Roberts listed other bills that underscore the standoff, including a bill last year to increase penalties for drug dealers whose customers die from use; it passed the Senate and failed at the House Judiciary Committee. Another bill he sponsored this year, which aimed to stop the unbonded pretrial release of some violent offenders, likewise died there, before it could ever be heard in the Senate.

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