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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NY: Snyder Faults Morgenthau On Drug Laws
Title:US NY: Snyder Faults Morgenthau On Drug Laws
Published On:2005-09-09
Source:New York Times (NY)
Fetched On:2008-01-15 13:38:35
SNYDER FAULTS MORGENTHAU ON DRUG LAWS

In her latest salvo against Robert M. Morgenthau, the Manhattan district
attorney, his Democratic primary opponent, Leslie Crocker Snyder, unveiled
a new advertisement yesterday that contends that his office thwarted
efforts to change the Rockefeller-era drug laws. These laws, enacted in
1973, impose long mandatory prison sentences on anyone, even a first-time
offender, who is caught with a certain amount of drugs.

Last year, the State Legislature reduced the minimum sentences for drug
offenders.

It also allowed those who had been convicted of the most serious felonies
and sentenced to the longest prison terms to ask a judge for a new
sentence. The commercial, called "Anonymous," is running on Time Warner Cable.

PRODUCER Jason McNaboe.

ON THE SCREEN A crossing signal displays the "Walk" icon (a little white
stick figure), then changes to the "Don't Walk" icon (a red hand). White
lettering on a black background says, "Thousands of New Yorkers are locked
up unfairly due to the Rockefeller drug laws. Who is accountable for the
slow pace of reform?" Against a red curtain, a dark figure appears, with
his face blacked out like a secret informer on a television newsmagazine.
He is identified as "Anonymous"; under a red line are the words,
"High-Ranking N.Y. Law Enforcement Official." The ad ends with a jerky,
blurry shot of Mr. Morgenthau and the words "After 30 years, it's time to
hold him accountable."

THE SCRIPT In an electronically altered voice, the mystery man on the
screen says: "I'm a high-ranking law enforcement official in New York
State. I view it as my responsibility to report the facts of what took
place at meetings where a representative of Mr. Morgenthau's office was
instrumental in opposing Rockefeller drug reform. Robert Morgenthau's
office, through his representative, Kristine Hamann, was a key part of that
effort."

ACCURACY Until last year, Mr. Morgenthau's office was not in the vanguard
of those trying to change the Rockefeller drug laws - but neither were any
of the 61 other district attorneys' offices. (Their state association
opposed most proposals to loosen the laws as recently as 2002.) Indeed,
many politicians began to pay attention to the issue only after the Albany
County district attorney was defeated in 2004 in large part because of his
support for the Rockefeller laws. While Mr. Morgenthau is influential in
Albany, it seems a stretch to blame him for the persistence of these laws.

The mystery man spoke to a reporter on the condition that his name not be
revealed, because people in his position are not supposed to be involved in
politics. He is indeed a high-level official in the criminal justice
system. Ms. Hamann, whom he mentions, has long been Mr. Morgenthau's
legislative liaison.

But her reported opposition to changing the laws is hard to evaluate
without information about when the meetings occurred and what the proposals
in question were.

SCORECARD The Rockefeller laws are highly unpopular in many areas of New
York; a poll commissioned by Ms. Snyder before her campaign began (and
before the Legislature changed the laws last year) found that changing the
laws was a potent issue among voters.

But like Mr. Morgenthau, Ms. Snyder could be accused of being a
Johnny-come-lately to this issue.

In her autobiography, published in 2002, she writes that the Rockefeller
laws "are not necessarily as draconian as their opponents describe them."
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