View Full Version : Governors unite to oppose change to three-strikes law


NJR102000
10-29-2004, 07:50 PM
Governors unite to oppose change to three-strikes law
By MICHAEL R. BLOOD, Associated Press Writer
Last Updated 1:35 pm PDT Friday, October 29, 2004
LOS ANGELES (AP) - In a striking show of political unity, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and four of his predecessors are urging voters to reject Proposition 66, a proposal on the November ballot that would roll back aspects of the state's three-strikes sentencing law.
Schwarzenegger and former Govs. Gray Davis, Pete Wilson and Jerry Brown stood shoulder to shoulder at a downtown hotel Thursday and warned Californians that they would witness a potentially deadly surge in crime if the proposal becomes law. Former Gov. George Deukmejian sent a statement echoing their concerns.

"It's a rare event when all five governors come together in opposition to a proposition. But we are strongly opposed ... because if Proposition 66 passes, crime will go up," said Davis, a Democrat ousted by Schwarzenegger last year.

Schwarzenegger, a Republican, said that "all of the evidence shows that the three-strikes laws get violent, dangerous criminals off the streets and keeps them behind bars, where they belong."

Proposition 66 "would take the teeth out of the three strikes law and favor the criminals instead of the victims," the governor added.

The bipartisan front of governors - Brown is a Democrat, Wilson and Deukmejian Republicans - added fresh evidence that the fight over Proposition 66 was emerging as one of the most hotly contested issues on the state ballot, which features 16 propositions.

It was Schwarzenegger's second major event keyed to stopping the proposition within a week, his political committee has donated at least $1 million for advertising and he's also urging voters to reject it in TV spots running around the state.

Big money is pouring into the campaign. Orange County billionaire Henry T. Nicholas III has put up $1.5 million to fight Proposition 66, while fellow billionaires George Soros and John G. Sperling have each kicked in $500,000 to help pass it.

The three-strikes law was established a decade ago with the support of nearly three of four voters. But recent polls have found that residents might be ready to reconsider, although significant numbers remain undecided.

Proposition 66 would make several significant changes to criminal law. First, it would require that the maximum 25-to-life term be imposed only if a felon's third conviction is "serious or violent," such as murder, rape or kidnapping. Under existing law, anyone convicted of a felony - including shoplifting - after having been convicted of two serious or violent felony crimes, would get at least a 25-year-to-life term.

The proposal would also make thousands of inmates eligible for resentencing, if their so-called third strike doesn't meet that new criteria.

Supporters say the change would restore fairness to a sentencing system that, in some cases, punishes minor offenders with what can amount to a lifetime sentence.

The governors' opposition "is just business as usual - politicians banding together to resist a popular, needed and common sense reform to please a powerful special interest, the prison guards union," said Sandy Harrison, a spokesman for the campaign supporting the change, Yes on 66.

"People know that rapists deserve stiffer sentences than shoplifters, and it doesn't matter at all if the politicians tell them differently," Harrison said.

There has been disagreement over the number of inmates that could be freed under the change - ranging from about 4,000 to more than six times that number.

Even some of the governors appeared to have different ideas.

Schwarzenegger has said 26,000 could be freed, an estimate by state district attorneys. But Davis said, "We may not know exactly how many violent criminals and serious offenders will be released early from prison."

Brown, a Democrat now serving as Oakland mayor, said "There are killers, known to our police department, that will be cut loose." Brown said half of three-strike offenders would be released, but didn't provide a number.

NJR102000
10-29-2004, 07:54 PM
No Matter How Much Money They Put Together Or How Many Governors Hold Hands In Opposition To Proposition 66. If I Were A Californian, I Would Be Voting yes For Proposition 66 !!!!!!

TerriB
10-30-2004, 12:06 AM
All I have to say about this is IF any of those Governors had a loved one in prison I would bet money they would change the way they feel, but wait, they wouldn't have a loved one in prison as they would find a way to "buy" their way out of it for them. Well in my opinion I think they would.

NJR102000
10-30-2004, 07:51 AM
I Totally Agree With You Steve's Girl!!!!

Don't You Wish We Could Vote For Prop 66 Even If We Were Not Californians????

Kathy
10-30-2004, 11:17 AM
The people have heard all these lies before, and were fooled by them in 1994. But not this time.

Thankfully, the voters of California are smarter than their elected officials and will correct the injustice of the three-strikes law by approving Proposition 66 next Tuesday.

Here are the real reasons they oppose Proposition 66:

Schwarzenegger - One year after he recalled Davis with promises of restoring California as a different kind of public servant, withdrew a 10% raise for prison guards to give them a 15% raise instead. Now lies about Prop 66 with the hopes of receiving millions in political contributions that the prison guards union gave to Governors before him.

Gray Davis – vetoed every bill passed by the Legislature regarding the three-strikes law. Even vetoed a bill to study the effects of the law. Received tens of millions of dollars in political contributions from the prison guards union.

Pete Wilson - lied to everyone in 1994 claiming that the three-strikes law would only apply to violent crimes when he knew it would apply equally to all felons, sentencing petty thieves and drug users as if they, too, had kidnapped, raped and murdered Polly Klaas. First Governor to receive multi-million-dollar political contributions from the prison guards union.

Jerry Brown – supported Citizens Against Violent Crime (CAVC) as it wrote and promoted Prop 66. Accepted political contributions for his Oakland mayoral campaigns from CAVC and its Board Members, until he recently began running for Attorney General (2006) and decided it was more opportunistic to pander to the prison guards for political contributions by opposing Prop 66. Same old Jerry Brown political philosophy of "whichever way the moon beams."

Bill Lockyer – Served as an advisor to CAVC and Prop 66 proponents Sam Clauder and Jim Benson for the past five years as they worked to develop the initiative and qualify it for the ballot. Switched sides to run for Governor (2006) and compete with Schwarzenegger for multi-million dollar contributions from the prison guards union. Recently married Nadia Davis, Orange County attorney who supported CAVC and Prop 66 through the years and got third-striker Ron Carmona out of a life-term for mistaken identity. Ever since Lockyer changed sides Nadia Davis has remained strangely silent.

Marc Klaas - "flip-flopper" on three-strikes - supported it at first, opposed it in 1994, supported it again, opposed it again, and now claims he currently supports it and wants petty, non-violent criminals sentenced as though they, too, kidnapped, raped and murdered his daughter. Has so suffered from the loss of Polly through the years that he has lost his wife, his girlfriends, his home, his job, has battled alcoholism, was almost arrested for spousal abuse, and is currently under psychiatric treatment and medication for clinical depression.