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Senate proposal to roll back bail reform sparks anger 

Assemblywoman Lantrice Walker, D-Brooklyn, speaks against making changes to New York's bail reforms at a rally at the Capitol on Wednesday.
Karen DeWitt / WXXI News
Assemblywoman Lantrice Walker, D-Brooklyn, speaks against making changes to New York's bail reforms at a rally at the Capitol on Wednesday.

A proposal in the state Senate to roll back part of the state’s recently enacted bail reforms produced an angry backlash from supporters of the law, which took effect Jan. 1 and ended most forms of cash bail for nonviolent crimes in New York.

The proposal by Senate Democrats, first reported by Newsday, would end all cash bail but let judges have more discretion over who should be released after an arrest. The judges would be allowed to take into consideration past criminal history and whether the person accused might be a flight risk.

Law enforcement groups and the state’s district attorneys have complained that the changes have led to some repeat offenders being released and then committing more crimes.

Sen. James Gaughran represents portions of Long Island, where the backlash to bail reform has been intense. He told public TV’s "New York Now"  that the proposal would address some perceived flaws in the law.

“It clearly fixes many of the issues that some of us have been saying needs to be corrected,” Gaughran said.

Sen. Jen Metzger, a Democrat from the Hudson Valley, said in a statement that she also backs the changes. 

Gaughran said not all of the Democrats, though, endorse the idea.

News of the Senate proposal angered supporters of bail reform, who held a rally on the grand staircase outside the Senate chambers. Some compared the proposed rollback to the nation’s legacy of slavery, others said it was reminiscent of Jim Crow laws.

Assemblyman Walter Mosely condemned the proposal in stark terms, calling it “bull---- legislation.”

“Sometimes you’ve got to be profane to be profound,” Mosely said.  

Mosely criticized Democratic senators who back the proposal, saying, “We can’t be bound by five or six members who call themselves Democrats but yet don’t act like Democrats.”

He urged progressive groups at the rally who helped Senate Democrats come to power in 2018 to consider withholding support from Democrats who vote to roll back bail reform.  

“Put the resources where Democrats are going to support other Democrats,” he said. “And for those who don’t want to act like Democrats, take their resources away from them.”

“We will vote you out,” the crowd chanted.

Also at the rally was Assemblyman Joe Lentol, an influential member in the Democratic conference who has led the Codes Committee, which deals with criminal law, since 1992.

“It’s the best thing that we’ve done in my lifetime and my time in the New York state Assembly,” Lentol said as the demonstrators cheered. “And we’re going to stand tall and stand firm.”

Afterward, Lentol said the Senate’s proposal was offered in 2019 when lawmakers were negotiating the criminal justice reforms.

“It isn’t anything new,” Lentol said. “The Assembly rejected it at the table, so why would we accept it now?”

Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie said it’s only been six weeks since the law was enacted, and he needs more hard data on how the state’s new bail reform laws are working before his house could even consider revisions.

“You need real data, real information, not cherry-picked stories and sensationalized events to try to paint a picture as to whether the law is working or not,” Heastie said.

Heastie said the Senate’s provision to give the judges more leeway could backfire.

“Which could end up causing more people to be incarcerated pretrial,” Heastie said. “And before they have been convicted of a crime.”

The speaker, who has worked closely with Senate Democratic Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins in the past, says he was not given a heads-up about the proposal, but says he’s “not surprised” by it.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Attorney General Tish James have both said they are open to some revisions to the law.

Heastie did not completely rule out making some changes as part of the state budget, due at the end of March, if he were to have solid evidence by then that the law as not working as planned. 

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau chief for the New York Public News Network, composed of a dozen newsrooms across the state. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990.