New York Daily News

Flap over hike in ‘trial’ age

- BYGLENN BLAIN

ALBANY — Gov. Cuomo’s plan to raise the age at which teens can be tried as adults received a lukewarm reaction from GOP lawmakers Thursday but won the support of a top prosecutor.

Senate Deputy GOP leader Thomas Libous (RBinghamto­n) said in a radio interview he’s open to Cuomo’s proposal but noted it’s a sensitive issue for lawmakers because of the violent nature of some youth crimes.

“Some of the most heinous crimes are committed by kids who are 16 and 17,” Brooklyn Sen. Martin Golden, another Republican and an ex-city cop, told the Daily News.

Cuomo, in his State of the State address Wednesday, said New York was among only two states that treat 16-year-olds as adults in criminal court. He called for a special commission to draft plans to increase the age but did not say by how much.

Nassau County District Attorney Kathleen Rice, head of the state District Attorneys Associatio­n, hailed Cuomo’s announceme­nt.

“What we are doing by treating these kids as adults is putting them in a potential cycle of recidivism,” said Rice, who stressed the associatio­n has yet to take a position on the issue.

Nearly 50,000 16- and 17-year-olds are arrested each year and charged as adults, advocates said. Most are charged with minor offenses like shopliftin­g and pot possession.

Rice and other advocates said treating 16- and 17-year-olds as adults denies them the programs they need to turn their lives around.

“It’s a myth that prosecutin­g kids as adults promotes public safety,” said Gabrielle Horowitz-Prisco of the Correction­al Associatio­n of New York.

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