Greene County Legislature Resolution No. 324-19 Urges Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature to “Hit the Pause Button on Bail Reform and Get-Out-Of-Jail-Free Cards” for criminals.

During the final stages of adopting its FY 2020 budget, the State of New York enacted sweeping criminal justice reforms including the elimination of cash bail for many specific enumerated crimes and the imposition of stringent discovery mandates on police and prosecutors.

Under bail reform, beginning Jan. 1, judges will be stripped of their discretion to set bail for many specific enumerated crimes, which means those suspected of committing these crimes can no longer be held in jail after their arrest, regardless of the strength of the case against these defendants, or the length of the potential sentence faced by the defendants, or the extent or harm caused by these defendants and instead these defendants will be released back into the general public.

A memo released by NYS Senator James N. Tedesco of the 49th District titled Cash Bail “Reform” Eliminations states:

As of January 1, 2020, a defendant must be released from custody without bail for the following crimes:

Manslaughter in the second degree

Aggravated vehicular homicide

Criminally negligent homicide

Assault in the third degree

Making a terroristic threat

Criminal possession of a gun on school grounds/criminal possession of a firearm

Criminal sale of a firearm to a minor

Arson in the third and fourth degree

Money laundering in support of terrorism in the third and fourth degree

Promoting or possessing an obscene sexual performance by a child

Aggravated cruelty to animals, overdriving, torturing and injuring animals, animal fighting

Unlawful imprisonment in the first degree

Coercion in the first degree

Grand larceny in the first degree

Criminal possession of a controlled substance in the first and second degree

Criminal sale of a controlled substance in the first and second degree, or near/on school grounds

Specified felony drug offenses involving the use of children

Patronizing a person for prostitution in a school zone

Failure to register as a sex offender

Bribery and bribe receiving in the first degree, bribe giving for public office

Promoting prison contraband in the first and second degree

Resisting arrest

Hindering prosecution

Tampering with a juror and tampering with physical evidence

Aggravated harassment in the first degree

Directing a laser at and aircraft in the first degree

Criminal possession of a weapon in the fourth degree

Enterprise corruption and money laundering in the first degree

Source: District Attorneys Association of the State of New York

See a copy of the original memo from NYS Senator James N. Tedesco

“The extreme burden placed on the criminal justice system by the new reforms does not serve the overwhelming majority of law-abiding citizens,” according to the Greene County Police Officers Association. “These citizens, especially crime victims, were completely disregarded in this one-sided, far-reaching and dramatic change to our criminal justice system.”

Greene County is anticipating additional staff due to the new laws, Greene County Administrator Shaun Groden said at the 2020 budget public hearing Nov. 4.

For example, the county is estimating the new laws will require one additional full-time employee for the probation department, one full-time employee in emergency services to help with the discovery process, two full-time employees in the district attorney’s office, one full-time employee with the Department of Social Services and one full-time employee in the Department of Motor Vehicles.

Additional staff needed for the public defender’s office will be funded through grants from Indigent Legal Services, Groden said, but other than that, the state is not providing funding, and the burden of this un-funded state mandate will fall on the county.

Support this resolution using the links below:

Send a Message to Governor Andrew Cuomo

Send a Message to NYS Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins

Send a Message to the Speaker of the NYS Assembly, Carl Heastie