Drug Policy Alliance Logo
About Take Action News Publications and Library Blog Contact Donate Events Community eStore
Home > News > Press Room > Press Releases > Advocates Celebrate: New York Embarks on New Direction, Developing a Public Health and Safety Approach to Drugs

News News

Donate Now Brilliant Flame (Orange)

re:FORM 2010

Marijuana: The Facts
What's Wrong With the Drug War?
Overdose
Safety First: Parents, Teens and Drugs
Drug By Drug
State By State
Reducing Harm: Treatment and Beyond
Drugs, Police & the Law
Communities Affected
Drug Policy Around the World
Publications and Library
What People are Talking About

Your Email
> Manage Subscriptions
What People are Talking About

Join the Drug Policy Alliance Network's work to promote drug policies based on science, compassion, health, and human rights.
Donate
> Get Involved
In this Section
bottom
The Latest

Tell the President: Don't Interfere With State Marijuana Laws



Send A Message
Full Text Resources

> more

Featured News

Web: Top 10 Stories of the Year-- AlterNet (US Web) [12/04/09]

> more news

 

Suggested Web sites
> more links

  

Advocates Celebrate: New York Embarks on New Direction, Developing a Public Health and Safety Approach to Drugs
New York Governor David Paterson Hosts Public Bill Signing Ceremony in Queens to Mark Real Reform of the Rockefeller Drug Laws

For Immediate Release: Thursday, April 23, 2009. Contact: Tony Newman (646) 335 - 5384 or gabriel sayegh (646) 335 - 2264

New York- Earlier this month, Gov. David Paterson signed historic reforms to the draconian Rockefeller Drug Laws, just days after the Assembly and Senate passed the same reforms. The bill enacts broad modifications to the long-failed Rockefeller Drug Laws, including restoring judicial discretion in most drug cases, expanding alternatives to incarceration, and investing millions in treatment. Advocates worked for years to secure such reforms.

The ceremony will take place in Corona, Queens, at the Elmcor Community Center. Corona is the district of longtime reform champion, Assemblyman Jeffrion Aubry, who at the community center was a drug treatment counselor years ago. Gov. Paterson and Assm. Aubry will be joined by other members of the legislature.

What:             Gov. Paterson Signing Legislation Reforming the Rockefeller Drug Laws
When:            Friday, April 24, 2009. 10:00 a.m.
Where:           Elmcor Youth and Adult Activities, Inc. 3316 108th Street, NY 11368 (Near the 7 train and Q48 or Q66 bus lines)

“After nearly 36 years of ineffective mandatory minimums, mass incarceration, institutional racism and billions in wasted taxpayer dollars, these critical reforms are long overdue and essential for making a better New York,” said Gabriel Sayegh, project director with the Drug Policy Alliance. “Gov. Paterson has helped to move our state in new direction on drug policy, one based on public health and safety, in fairness and justice. This shows what is possible when people come together and work for change.”

While advocates applaud the changes to the law, they also pointout that reforms should have gone even farther. For instance, some mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses still remain intact, and harsh penalties for low-level drug offenses remain on the books.

“After many years of fighting these laws from behind bars and as a free man, I am grateful that we have finally achieved meaningful reform” said Anthony Papa, communications specialist for the Drug Policy Alliance who once spent 12 years in prison under the Rockefeller Drug Laws. “Now, it’s time to embrace the changes and set free those who have been imprisoned under harsh and unjust mandatory sentencing, allowing those who are eligible for judicial relief to be reunited with their families and start productive lives as citizens of New York.”

Details of the new law include:

  • Eliminates mandatory minimums by returning judicial discretion low-level drug law cases
  • Allocates over $70 million to expand treatment and re-entry services
  • Expands drug courts and alternatives to incarceration
  • Allows approximately 1,500 people incarcerated for low-level nonviolent drug offenses to apply for resentencing.

###



Provide Feedback on this Page:

* 1.




 2.



 3.



   Please leave this field empty