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Op-Ed: New York’s Bail Reform Laws Need to be Changed

Jim Magee (Photo courtesy of Jim Magee)

May 10, 2022 Op-Ed By Jim Magee, Candidate for Assembly District 37

My name is Jim Magee. I am a Democratic candidate for State Assembly in the 37th District in Queens. I am a former prosecutor, current criminal defense attorney, husband and father.

In 2019, so-called “progressives” in the New York State legislature made it nearly impossible to prosecute crime. As a result, crime in the City is up over 40 percent this year. These changes, commonly known as “bail reform,” were passed in Albany without a debate or a vote by people with almost no experience in criminal justice.

Mayor Eric Adams wants to reverse many of these changes. So do I. As I talk to voters, it is clear that there is some confusion as to what changes were actually made.

The law is nicknamed “bail reform” because the legislature prohibited experienced judges from setting bail in most cases. This means that, no matter what the defendant’s prior track record for appearing in court, he or she is released.

These crimes included larceny, assault, robbery and burglary.

There have been some horrific results of this change, most notably, Christina Yuna Lee who was stabbed to death in her bathtub in Chinatown in February. The defendant in that case was out of jail on a pending assault charge when he was rearrested in January for 27 counts of property damage. Then, due to the bail reform law, he was released without bail a month before the murder.

Tragically, almost every day there is a crime story on the front page.

Unfortunately, ending judicial discretion is not the most damaging part of the law. The legislature, with no debate and no input from judges or the sixty two democratically elected district attorneys, placed a crippling discovery burden on prosecutors.

Already overworked assistant district attorneys were now given the responsibility to track down all paperwork, notes and videos before a case could be marked for trial. No additional funds were provided to the District Attorneys in order to meet this new obligation. These offices were overwhelmed.

The result was that hundreds of thousands of cases were dismissed or prematurely settled because prosecutors only had time to prosecute the most serious crimes.

You may have noticed the change if your local pharmacy is either locking up its inventory or closing for business entirely. Under these laws, there is no consequence for stealing from a store.

The responsible thing for the legislature to have done would have been to increase funding for mental health and addiction.

In the two decades that I worked in criminal justice prior to the new law, I watched the district attorneys increasingly direct those suffering from mental illness and addiction into court ordered out-patient treatment as an alternative to incarceration.

I am a member of a panel of defense attorneys who take the cases of those who cannot afford a lawyer. Prior to the new discovery law, I was placing two or three people into court ordered treatment a month. Since the law passed, I have not placed anybody into treatment.

Those cases are simply not being prosecuted and those defendants are off the radar. Enrollments in court ordered addiction and mental health treatment have plummeted. While criminal court is empty, you may have noticed a change in your local park or on the subway.

It is hard to believe that this was not all done on purpose by people with no criminal justice experience. Proponents of the law claim that it addresses the socioeconomic inequities in the system, but that simply isn’t true. Most of the victims of the current rise in crime are the poorest among us.

Furthermore, there are plenty of inequities in the penal code itself that target the poor. For instance, someone without identification in a housing project is subject to arrest.

Apparently, the legislature simply could not be bothered with addressing laws such as that. But this is because the purpose of the law was not to fix criminal prosecution at all, it was to effectively end it. The results are everywhere.

Instead of recognizing this for the crisis that it is, my opponents have gone even further, calling for defunding the police department at a time when crime is on the rise and our citizens are afraid. All of our tough gun laws are only as effective as the police we have to enforce them.

Progressive values should include a fairer tax code, higher wages, universal health care, affordable housing, and a healthy environment for ourselves and our children.

Unfortunately, that is not where our representatives in Albany used their political capital. This last budget gave hundreds of millions more away in tax breaks for the rich. Meanwhile those affected by crime were ignored.

There is nothing “progressive” about refusing to prosecute crime. Protecting the weak and vulnerable is something that we used to take for granted as a matter of common sense and decency.

We should never stop working to end the causes of crime, but to ignore a crime once it is committed is an abdication of a basic governmental responsibility.

Please help me and elected officials like Mayor Adams reverse this trend and show that the Democratic Party can govern responsibly on public safety. We have to stop electing people who simply do not know what they are doing.

Jim Magee (Photo courtesy of Jim Magee)

email the author: news@queenspost.com

One Comment

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Jessica

You are not a realistic (dare I say real?) criminal defense attorney. If you were, you would support these laws. You would understand the injustice inherent in our criminal (in)justice system. Anyone who is able to justify having been a prosecutor will never understand how the system really works against every person of color and any person without means who is targeted for arrest by the police.

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