□rt land (®hserver__________________________ May 2.2007 PageA2 Second Chance for Juvenile Offenders Urged Lawmakers consider changes to Measure 11 (A P )-O reg o n lawmakers may try to revise a 1994 get-tough- on-erime law in a way that would allow the early release o f juvenile offenders charged with serious crim es. Some legislators and advocacy groups say they think the public is ready for a second look at whether the law is cost-effective and the best way to rehabilitate young offenders. M easure 11 requires judges to sentence people convicted o f se­ rious crim es, including young offenders, to fixed prison terms with no possibility of parole or probation. The House and Senate ju d i­ ciary com m ittees recently con­ d u c te d p u b lic h e a rin g s on m easures to revise sentencing procedures for 15, 16 and 17- year-olds who com m it the most serious crim es such as murder, assault, robbery or kidnapping. The House measure would give those youths a chance to go be­ 17 -y e a r-o ld s fore a judge for a "second look" af­ sh o u ld be d ealt w ith d iffe re n tly ter they have served than 25-year-old half o f their sen­ h a rd en ed c rim i­ te n c e s . Ju d g e s nals." could grant youths Under the Sen­ release to serve the rem ainder o f their ate m e a su re , youths would re­ s e n te n c e s u n d e r ceive pretrial hear­ post-prison super­ ings in adult court vision if it can be in w hich ju d g e s proved that they would determ ine have made signifi­ Rep. Chip Shields cant progress while w hether trying the case in juvenile court or adult incarcerated. "I think the public, if you asked court would be best suited to them, would be OK with giving protect public safety w hile pro­ juveniles a 'second look,' " said moting rehabilitation. A key lawmaker, Sen. Ginny Rep. Chip Shields, D-Portland. "Most people realize that 15- to Burdick, said it’s "nocoincidence" that the M easure 11 issue is being "Some o f these juveniles are given a higher profile now that very, very dangerous, and some D em ocrats are in charge o f both do need to go away for a very long the House and the Senate for the time," the Portland Democrat said. first tim e in 16 years. "But the question is, do all o f them Burdick, who is chairw om an need to? In my opinion, we are o f the Senate Judiciary C om m it­ sacrificing some young lives that tee, said it's doubtful that legisla­ we don't have to." tion will pass this session, since About 50 youths are sentenced it would require a superm ajority each year under M easure 11, o f law m akers in both cham bers according to state figures. Kevin Neely, spokesm an for to revise M easure 11. Still, she said Democrats - as the O regon D istrict A ttorneys well as some Republicans - be­ A ssociation, said the group will lieve the time has com e to begin "vigorously oppose" the rewrite a serious, long-term look at the o f a m easure that w as o v e r­ effectiveness o f the state's laws w helm ingly approved by voters aim ed at deterring crime, includ­ and which has been credited with ing M easure 1 l's provisions deal­ helping to bring down O regon's ing with juvenile offenders. violent crim e rate. Police Tactics Uneven Minorities more likely to be searched and arrested (AP) -- Black, Hispanic and white drivers are equally likely to be pulled over by police, but blacks and Hispanics are much more likely to be searched and arrested, a federal study found. Police were much more likely to threaten or use force against blacks and Hispanics than against whites in any encounter, whether at a traffic stop or elsew here, according to the Justice Depart­ ment. The study, released Sunday by the department's Bureau of Justice Statistics, covered police contacts with the public during 2005 and was based on inter­ views by the Census Bureau with nearly 64,(XK) people age 16 or over. "The numbers are very con­ sistent" with those found in a sim ilar study o f police-public contacts in 2002, bureau statisti­ cian M atthew R. D urose, the report's co-author, said in an interview. "There's some stabil­ ity in the findings over these three years." Traffic stops have become a politically volatile issue. M inor­ ity groups have complained that many stops and searches are based on race rather than on legitimate suspicions. Blacks in particular have complained of being pulled over for simply "driving while black." "The available data is sketchy but deeply concerning," said Hi­ lary Shelton, director o f the NAACP’s W ashington bureau. The civil rights organization has done its own surveys o f traffic stops, and he said the racial d isp a ritie s grow larger, the deeper the studies delve. Traffic stops are the most frequent way police interact with the public, accounting for 41 percent o f all contacts. A series o f pro­ vocative reader boards at the Florida Room, 435 N. Killingsworth St., brought Max Julian to a protest Saturday outside the bar and restaurant. photo by M ark W ashington / T he P ortland O bserver North Portland Reader Board Incites Protest About a dozen local residents gathered in front o f the Florida Room in north Portland on Sat­ urday to raise debate and discus­ sion about what makes a good business neighbor and what is negative gentrification. A changeable marquee to ad­ vertise the establishment has car­ ried language that some people find offensive, especially in a neigh­ borhood rooted in family and reli­ gious values and just a few feet from Jefferson High School. The protesting group. Citizens O vercom ing Racism and Sex­ ism, read a proclam ation calling on efforts to inform, educate and support change that will improve the quality o f life in north and northeast Portland, and in par­ ticular the African American com ­ munity. Cocaine Sentencing Disparities Tackled T he U nited States S e n te n c ­ ing C om m ission recom m ended Sunday that C o ngress narrow the current federal sentencing d isp a rity b etw een c rack and pow der cocaine offenses. Distributing just five gram s o f crack forexam ple, carries a m ini­ mum 5-year federal prison sen­ tence, w hile d istrib u tin g 500 gram s o f pow der cocaine carries the same sentence. This is the second time since 2002 the com ­ mission recom m ended that C on­ I I I | gress narrow this 100-1 ratio disparity to 20-1. "M em bers o f Congress must not allow politics and myths about crack and its users to prevent them from doing what's right,” said C aroline Fredrickson, direc­ tor o f the A merican Civil Liber­ ties U nion's W ashington, D.C. legislative office. T he A C LU said it w as d isa p ­ pointed the S entencing C o m ­ m ission did not recom m end a com plete elim ination o f the sen­ Ç n h ç r r i h J 503-288-0033 i-ii n o te n c in g d i s p a r i t y b e tw e e n c ra c k an d p o w d e r c o c a in e , "d esp ite the w ealth o f research and data it has collected over the years indicating no m edical or legal reason for the d isp a r­ ity. “T his unjust policy is based on little m ore than politics and urban m yths, ye, it's been a l­ low ed to stand for over 20 years, dev astatin g A frican-A m erican co m m u n ities in the p ro cess,” F rederickson said. m b (Ohseruer I PO Box 3137, A" " Subscriptions, Subs<-n Pu I subscriptions are just $60 per year (please include check with this subscription form) | O LI " U S C I I U v • I aa F i l l A u t X, i t T rv i 'll Out & Send To: porl|antioR97208 I N ame : __________________________ T elephone : _______________ I J A ddress : or email subscriptions@portlandobserver.com Are you mechanically inclined? 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