Legislature(2015 - 2016)GRUENBERG 120

03/22/2016 05:00 PM House JUDICIARY

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05:05:23 PM Start
05:06:15 PM HB205
07:13:04 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
-- Recessed to 3/23/16 at 1:00 p.m. --
-- Please Note Time --
+= HB 205 CRIMINAL LAW/PROCEDURE; DRIV LIC; PUB AID TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Public & Invited Testimony --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
               HOUSE JUDICIARY STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                         March 22, 2016                                                                                         
                           5:05 p.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                              
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Gabrielle LeDoux, Chair                                                                                          
Representative Wes Keller, Vice Chair                                                                                           
Representative Neal Foster                                                                                                      
Representative Bob Lynn                                                                                                         
Representative Charisse Millett (telephonic)                                                                                    
Representative Matt Claman                                                                                                      
Representative Jonathan Kreiss-Tomkins                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Kurt Olson (alternate)                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
HOUSE BILL NO. 205                                                                                                              
"An Act relating to conditions  of release; relating to community                                                               
work   service;  relating   to  credit   toward  a   sentence  of                                                               
imprisonment  for certain  persons  under electronic  monitoring;                                                               
relating  to the  restoration under  certain circumstances  of an                                                               
administratively  revoked driver's  license, privilege  to drive,                                                               
or  privilege  to  obtain  a license;  allowing  a  reduction  of                                                               
penalties  for offenders  successfully completing  court- ordered                                                               
treatment  programs for  persons convicted  of driving  under the                                                               
influence; relating to termination of  a revocation of a driver's                                                               
license; relating to restoration  of a driver's license; relating                                                               
to  credits  toward a  sentence  of  imprisonment, to  good  time                                                               
deductions, and to providing for  earned good time deductions for                                                               
prisoners;  relating  to  early   termination  of  probation  and                                                               
reduction of probation  for good conduct; relating  to the rights                                                               
of  crime victims;  relating to  the disqualification  of persons                                                               
convicted of  certain felony drug offenses  from participation in                                                               
the  food stamp  and temporary  assistance programs;  relating to                                                               
probation; relating to mitigating  factors; relating to treatment                                                               
programs   for  prisoners;   relating  to   the  duties   of  the                                                               
commissioner of  corrections; amending  Rule 32, Alaska  Rules of                                                               
Criminal Procedure; and providing for an effective date."                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD & HELD                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
BILL: HB 205                                                                                                                  
SHORT TITLE: CRIMINAL LAW/PROCEDURE; DRIV LIC; PUB AID                                                                          
SPONSOR(s): REPRESENTATIVE(s) MILLETT                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
04/17/15       (H)       READ THE FIRST TIME - REFERRALS                                                                        
04/17/15       (H)       JUD, FIN                                                                                               
03/11/16       (H)       JUD AT 12:30 AM GRUENBERG 120                                                                          
03/11/16       (H)       -- MEETING CANCELED --                                                                                 
03/12/16       (H)       JUD AT 2:00 PM GRUENBERG 120                                                                           
03/12/16       (H)       -- MEETING CANCELED --                                                                                 
03/14/16       (H)       JUD AT 12:30 AM GRUENBERG 120                                                                          
03/14/16       (H)       Heard & Held                                                                                           
03/14/16       (H)       MINUTE (JUD)                                                                                           
03/16/16       (H)       JUD AT 12:30 AM GRUENBERG 120                                                                          
03/16/16       (H)       Heard & Held                                                                                           
03/16/16       (H)       MINUTE (JUD)                                                                                           
03/18/16       (H)       JUD AT 12:30 AM GRUENBERG 120                                                                          
03/18/16       (H)       Heard & Held                                                                                           
03/18/16       (H)       MINUTE (JUD)                                                                                           
03/21/16       (H)       JUD AT 12:30 AM GRUENBERG 120                                                                          
03/21/16       (H)       Heard & Held                                                                                           
03/21/16       (H)       MINUTE (JUD)                                                                                           
03/21/16       (H)       JUD AT 5:00 PM GRUENBERG 120                                                                           
03/21/16       (H)       Heard & Held                                                                                           
03/21/16       (H)       MINUTE (JUD)                                                                                           
03/22/16       (H)       JUD AT 5:00 PM GRUENBERG 120                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
CARMEN LOWRY, Executive Director                                                                                                
Alaska Network on Domestic Violence & Sexual Assault (ANDVSA)                                                                   
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of HB 205, offered                                                                    
testimony in support.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
LAUREE MORTON, Executive Director                                                                                               
Council on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault (CDVSA)                                                                         
Department of Public Safety                                                                                                     
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of HB 205, offered                                                                    
testimony in support.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
TRINA SEARS, Attorney                                                                                                           
Office of Victims' Rights                                                                                                       
Legislative Affairs                                                                                                             
Alaska State Legislature                                                                                                        
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:   During the  hearing  on HB  205, spoke  in                                                             
opposition to aspects of the bill.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
ANN SEYMOUR                                                                                                                     
Justice Solutions                                                                                                               
Address Unknown                                                                                                                 
POSITION  STATEMENT:   During the  hearing  of HB  205, spoke  in                                                             
favor of the bill.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
BRENDA STANFILL, Executive Director                                                                                             
Interior Alaska Center for Non-Violent Living                                                                                   
Fairbanks, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:   During the  hearing of  HB 205,  discussed                                                             
victims' services and spoke in favor of the bill.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MADISEN DUSENBURY                                                                                                               
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:   During  the  hearing  of HB  205,  opposed                                                             
certain provisions in the bill.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
KARA NELSON, Director                                                                                                           
Haven House                                                                                                                     
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:   During  the  hearing  of HB  205,  offered                                                             
support.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
ANTHONY BIELER, Peer Support Specialist                                                                                         
Cook Inlet Tribal Council (CITC)                                                                                                
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:   During the  hearing of  HB 205,  discussed                                                             
lack of treatment facilities.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MAUDE BLAIR                                                                                                                     
Alaska Federation of Natives                                                                                                    
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the  hearing of HB 205, discussed the                                                             
benefits of reinvestment.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
5:05:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  GABRIELLE  LEDOUX  called  the  House  Judiciary  Standing                                                             
Committee meeting  to order at 5:05  p.m. Representatives Millett                                                               
(telephonic), Keller,  Lynn, Claman,  and LeDoux were  present at                                                               
the  call to  order.   Representatives Foster  and Kreiss-Tomkins                                                               
arrived as the meeting was in progress.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
        HB 205-CRIMINAL LAW/PROCEDURE; DRIV LIC; PUB AID                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
5:06:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX announced  that the only order of  business would be                                                               
HOUSE BILL  NO. 205, "An  Act relating to conditions  of release;                                                               
relating to community  work service; relating to  credit toward a                                                               
sentence  of imprisonment  for certain  persons under  electronic                                                               
monitoring;   relating   to   the   restoration   under   certain                                                               
circumstances  of an  administratively revoked  driver's license,                                                               
privilege to drive, or privilege  to obtain a license; allowing a                                                               
reduction  of  penalties  for offenders  successfully  completing                                                               
court-  ordered  treatment  programs  for  persons  convicted  of                                                               
driving  under  the  influence;  relating  to  termination  of  a                                                               
revocation of  a driver's license;  relating to restoration  of a                                                               
driver's  license;  relating  to  credits toward  a  sentence  of                                                               
imprisonment,  to  good time  deductions,  and  to providing  for                                                               
earned  good time  deductions for  prisoners;  relating to  early                                                               
termination  of probation  and reduction  of  probation for  good                                                               
conduct; relating  to the  rights of  crime victims;  relating to                                                               
the disqualification of persons  convicted of certain felony drug                                                               
offenses  from  participation in  the  food  stamp and  temporary                                                               
assistance   programs;  relating   to   probation;  relating   to                                                               
mitigating   factors;   relating   to  treatment   programs   for                                                               
prisoners;  relating  to  the  duties   of  the  commissioner  of                                                               
corrections;  amending   Rule  32,   Alaska  Rules   of  Criminal                                                               
Procedure; and providing for an effective date."                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
[Before  the House  Judiciary Standing  Committee  was CSHB  205,                                                               
labeled 29-LS0896\H, adopted 3/14/16.]                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX opened invited testimony.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
5:07:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CARMEN  LOWRY, Executive  Director,  Alaska  Network on  Domestic                                                               
Violence  &  Sexual Assault  (ANDVSA),  advised  that the  Alaska                                                               
Network  on Domestic  Violence  & Sexual  Assault  (ANDVSA) is  a                                                               
network  of  coalition of  23  agencies  working to  prevent  and                                                               
respond  to  domestic  violence and  sexual  assault  across  the                                                               
state.  She read her written testimony as follows:                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     In  that  role,  we  provide  a  collective  voice  for                                                                    
     victims' advocates,  as well  as victims  and survivors                                                                    
     of domestic  violence and sexual assault  to inform and                                                                    
     influence  the  state-wide   coordination  of  domestic                                                                    
     violence and sexual assault services.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     I first want  to thank you all for  the opportunity for                                                                    
     me to  provide testimony  today.  We  want to  say that                                                                    
     the Network  extends our appreciation  to the  way that                                                                    
     the   Alaska  Criminal   Justice  Commission's   reform                                                                    
     initiative  has involved  victims of  crime and  victim                                                                    
     advocates.   We believe that  this shows a  very strong                                                                    
     will  to  ensure  that  any   changes  that  are  being                                                                    
     proposed or  that might come about  within the criminal                                                                    
     justice  and  corrections'   systems  are  relevant  to                                                                    
     victims  and it  doesn't put  them at  harm.   So thank                                                                    
     you.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     The second ... we want  to also use this opportunity to                                                                    
     express  our gratitude  to,  in  particular to  Senator                                                                    
     Coghill for  his sustained support and  his willingness                                                                    
     to also work  very closely with advocates.   And to the                                                                    
     way  that ...  that he's  allowed for  those inputs  to                                                                    
     come  in and  to value  those.   The Network  and other                                                                    
     victim  advocates have  been invited  to the  table and                                                                    
     ...  we've been  able  to engage,  we've  been able  to                                                                    
     listen, and we feel like  this is a very productive way                                                                    
     for all of us to learn about inputs into this bill.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     Our  main goal  at the  Network is  to ensure  that the                                                                    
     interests of  victims of  domestic violence  and sexual                                                                    
     assault are  heard, respected, and  protected.   And so                                                                    
     what we're focusing  in on in our  involvement with you                                                                    
     all  on this  is to  focus on  particular areas  of the                                                                    
     bill which  look at victim notification,  categories of                                                                    
     crime,  eligibility for  violation  or  arrest, and  in                                                                    
     particular, the  ways that the pretrial  will be phased                                                                    
     in since we don't currently have these now.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     And most  importantly, and think  kind of  exciting for                                                                    
     the   Network,  is   that  we   look  forward   to  the                                                                    
     reinvestment process and how  that will impact the long                                                                    
     term health of  Alaskan residents.  And  just to extend                                                                    
     on that thought a moment, I  want to share with you all                                                                    
     that the ... that the  Network and our member programs,                                                                    
     and other  stakeholders in this state  are already very                                                                    
     well prepared  to move very quickly  and efficiently to                                                                    
     help  the state  translate the  savings that  will come                                                                    
     about in  this bill into reinvestment  into prevention,                                                                    
     victims' services.   First of all, we  have a statewide                                                                    
     steering  group called,  Pathways to  Prevention.   The                                                                    
     statewide  steering  group  is  comprised  of  multiple                                                                    
     stakeholders  across   the  state,   including  service                                                                    
     providers,  people  within  state  government,  elders,                                                                    
     people from  rural areas, children, youth,  and all the                                                                    
     different types of  people.  And this  is a partnership                                                                    
     that is done  in consortium or in  partnership with the                                                                    
     CDC.   What we're doing  is looking at  planning, we're                                                                    
     looking at  what our best  practices, we're  looking at                                                                    
     what  produces evidence,  and  what  is evidence  based                                                                    
     programming.   Because we want  to do  programming that                                                                    
     is  effective,  that's  relevant,   and  that  makes  a                                                                    
     difference.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     The second  aspect, to  demonstrate the  readiness that                                                                    
     we are,  is that we  have a high degree  of involvement                                                                    
     of   youth.     Currently   we   have   a  very   large                                                                    
     participatory program called, Lead  On, that is a youth                                                                    
     summit  that brings  youth from  all  across the  state                                                                    
     together for  three days  in order  to help  them learn                                                                    
     about  ... about  how  to  have healthy  relationships,                                                                    
     about how to be more  involved in their community.  And                                                                    
     from that  initial gathering up to  35 communities have                                                                    
     received  small  grants,  and   these  are  youth  lead                                                                    
     grants.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     And then the final point that  I want to say about what                                                                    
     prepares  us to  help  you move  into the  reinvestment                                                                    
     part is  that collectively  we can see  that we  have a                                                                    
     commitment.      And   I   think   that   the   ongoing                                                                    
     conversations that  we're having  around the  bills and                                                                    
     around the commission and  the reform demonstrates that                                                                    
     there  is a  strong commitment.   And  we just  want to                                                                    
     say, in closing,  that we do appreciate  being asked to                                                                    
     the table, we  appreciate being able to  have our input                                                                    
     heard,  we  appreciate  that  there   is  a  value  for                                                                    
     victims' perspectives,  and to thank you  very much for                                                                    
     that.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
5:12:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LAUREE MORTON, Executive Director, Council on Domestic Violence                                                                 
and Sexual Assault (CDVSA), Department of Public Safety,                                                                        
paraphrased her written testimony into the record as follows:                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     Thank you  for taking  testimony on  victims' services,                                                                    
     prevention, recommendation  21 of the  Criminal Justice                                                                    
     Commission's  report, and  the reinvestment  priorities                                                                    
     contained within the report.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     Alaska  is  the  first  state  involved  in  this  huge                                                                    
     justice  reinvestment initiative  that listed  victims'                                                                    
     issues  as one  of its  top priorities,  which I  think                                                                    
     shows  the  strong  commitment  from  all  branches  of                                                                    
     government  to support  victims while  addressing these                                                                    
     crimes.  And the Council appreciates that support.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     And, Madam Chair has Ms. Moore already spoken?                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
5:14:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX advised that she had not.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
LAUREE MORTON continued reading her testimony as follows:                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     Okay.    The  commission  held  two  victims'  services                                                                    
     roundtables, one  in Fairbanks and one  in Bethel, last                                                                    
     fall.   They also conducted individual  interviews with                                                                    
     victims,  service providers,  and  stakeholders in  the                                                                    
     Anchorage  area.     Ten  priorities   were  identified                                                                    
     through  information   collected  from   these  various                                                                    
     sources.   I believe  the committee has  a copy  of the                                                                    
     report generated by the  roundtable discussions, it was                                                                    
     passed out to  you today.  Several  of those priorities                                                                    
     were  rolled up  into  the  reinvestment priorities  of                                                                    
     violence  prevention and  victims'  services in  remote                                                                    
     and bush communities.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     I  want  to  share  some  good news  with  you  and  to                                                                    
     advocate a comprehensive strategic  approach to use the                                                                    
     reinvestment dollars to  further prevention efforts and                                                                    
     strengthen  services throughout  the state.   First,  a                                                                    
     little  context in  these.   For  years  we have  heard                                                                    
     Alaska  leads the  nation in  the  number of  assaults,                                                                    
     intimate partner  violence, sexual violence,  and child                                                                    
     sexual  abuse.   All  things  that  women and  children                                                                    
     endure.     Until   2010,  most   of  the   information                                                                    
     supporting those  were anecdotal or based  on scattered                                                                    
     reports  to law  enforcement.   In 2010,  the statewide                                                                    
     Alaska Victimization  Survey revealed  58 out  of every                                                                    
     100 Alaskan  women suffered intimate  partner violence,                                                                    
     sexual   violence,  or   both   over  their   lifetime.                                                                    
     Subsequent regional  surveys from 2011 to  2014, showed                                                                    
     a consistency with  the overall state numbers.   We had                                                                    
     data   from  women   themselves   that  supported   the                                                                    
     anecdotes  and law  enforcement  reports.   People  who                                                                    
     worked  in   shelters  and  rape  crisis   centers  who                                                                    
     volunteered for crisis lines, who  went with victims to                                                                    
     gather evidence  through rape  exams, knew  the numbers                                                                    
     were high.   I don't think anyone was  prepared for how                                                                    
     high.    Focused  attention moved  from  the  emergency                                                                    
     rooms, our  shelters and  rape crisis  centers, outward                                                                    
     toward prevention.   How could we  move our communities                                                                    
     from  the  norm of  violence  against  women, to  lives                                                                    
     freed  from  that  violence?     While  prevention  and                                                                    
     education about healthy ways of  being have always been                                                                    
     part  of the  battered women  and anti-sexual  violence                                                                    
     movement.  Advocates, for too  long, were the only ones                                                                    
     working to  bring those concepts  to society  at large.                                                                    
     More  Alaskans  now stood  ready  to  talk about  these                                                                    
     crimes  and  search  for   ways  to  create  meaningful                                                                    
     change, peace  in our communities.   Resources  are not                                                                    
     only financial  in nature, but financial  resources are                                                                    
     necessary   and   with   the   prior   administration's                                                                    
     leadership  and  the  consent  of  the  27th  and  28th                                                                    
     Legislatures,   finances  were   supplied  to   include                                                                    
     comprehensive    prevention     strategies    purposely                                                                    
     throughout   Alaska,  permeating   community  meetings,                                                                    
     schools, wellness coalitions,  even day-to-day ordinary                                                                    
     conversation between friends.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     Which brings us to today and  the good news.  We have a                                                                    
     handout and  if you will  turn to the fourth  page, you                                                                    
     will see  the lifetime  estimate.   But, look  at those                                                                    
     2010,  in which  the statewide  first survey  was done,                                                                    
     and 2015, which we  just completed the second statewide                                                                    
     survey.  The 2015  Statewide Victimization Survey shows                                                                    
     a  decline in  the number  of women  who have  suffered                                                                    
     intimate  partner violence,  sexual violence,  or both,                                                                    
     not only over  their lifetime but in the  prior year in                                                                    
     which the  study was  conducted.  You  can see  that in                                                                    
     the  lifetime estimates  for intimate  partner violence                                                                    
     in  2010, 47.6  percent of  the women  endured intimate                                                                    
     partner violence.   In 2015,  that has dropped  to 40.4                                                                    
     percent,  which  is  a 15  percent  decrease.    Sexual                                                                    
     violence in 2010,  was at 37.1 percent.   In 2015, it's                                                                    
     dropped  to 33.1  percent, which  is a  decrease of  11                                                                    
     percent.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
5:18:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX  referred to the handout  regarding "sexual violence                                                               
forcible"  and  "alcohol  or  drug involved"  and  asked  her  to                                                               
explain the distinction.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORTON  responded that the  questions around  sexual violence                                                               
were split into  two categories, alcohol or  drug involved sexual                                                               
violence,   and  sexual   violence   without   alcohol  or   drug                                                               
involvement.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX  asked whether  she was  suggesting that  alcohol or                                                               
drugs involved didn't involve violence,  and if it didn't involve                                                               
violence what was it.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORTON  related that it  could have involved  forcible sexual                                                               
violence, and this  is just a distinction between  whether or not                                                               
alcohol or drugs were involved  in the violent incident of sexual                                                               
assault.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX surmised that it all involves force and violence.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MORTON responded  yes,  the distinction  is  whether or  not                                                               
alcohol or  drugs were involved,  and she offered to  provide the                                                               
full  report   on  the  victimization  survey   wherein  distinct                                                               
questions asked.   For example, she said, a  person responding to                                                               
the survey did not have to answer  "yes or no" as to whether they                                                               
were  sexually  assaulted.   Rather,  they  were  asked  specific                                                               
behavioral  questions, such  as  whether someone  tried to  force                                                               
them to have vaginal sex, whether  someone tried to force them to                                                               
have  anal  sex,  and whether  someone  presented  some  specific                                                               
sexual violent behavior.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
5:20:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX extended  that she  wanted to  clarify that  it all                                                               
involved force,  and that  she is unsure  whether Ms.  Morton was                                                               
saying yes or no.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORTON  opined, no to  physical force,  and yes in  the event                                                               
someone forces an  act of sexual violence  against another person                                                               
without their consent.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
5:21:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE LYNN said he did  not understand Ms. Morton's last                                                               
answer and asked her to repeat it.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MORTON  explained  that  the   difference  between  the  two                                                               
sections of the  survey had to do with whether  or not alcohol or                                                               
drugs were used.   She remarked that any form  of sexual violence                                                               
is violence, and the distinction  here was whether or not alcohol                                                               
or drugs were used.  In  2010, 26.8 percent of the cases involved                                                               
alcohol or  drugs, and  25.6 percent  of people  reporting sexual                                                               
violence reported  that it was  forcible sexual violence  with no                                                               
alcohol or drugs involved.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
5:22:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE LYNN  asked whether she meant  physical force such                                                               
as grabbing  someone, or emotional  force which could  be defined                                                               
as a threat.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORTON apologized  for not making the  full survey available,                                                               
and that she  would prefer to make it available  to the committee                                                               
rather than go by her memory.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MORTON turned  to the  handout "Trends  from 2010-2015"  and                                                               
pointed  out that  within the  prior year  instances, there  were                                                               
6,556 fewer  victims of intimate  partner violence in  2015, than                                                               
in 2010.  She pointed out  that there were 3,072 fewer victims of                                                               
sexual violence in  2015, than in 2010.  The  reason this is good                                                               
news, although  still unacceptably  high, is that  Alaska dropped                                                               
from a lifetime  of 58 out of  every 100 Alaskan women  to 50 out                                                               
of every 100 Alaskan women, she remarked.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
5:24:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE LYNN requested her estimation  of the cause of the                                                               
violence going down.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORTON  answered that  the Council  on Domestic  Violence and                                                               
Sexual Assault (CDVSA) believes that  a portion of that good news                                                               
is the prevention  efforts that have been put  forward since 2010                                                               
through today.  She continued reading her testimony as follows:                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     So, the  survey showed that  there is a  ... prevalence                                                                    
     is  decreasing, the  trends are  heading  in the  right                                                                    
     direction,  but  we  still   needs  to  strengthen  our                                                                    
     efforts for  all women to be  safe.  And, how  do we do                                                                    
     that?  How do  we move  forward?   I  think we  provide                                                                    
     focused attention  to the prevention that  is necessary                                                                    
     to   continue  the   change  community   by  community.                                                                    
     Promoting  community  readiness   and  being  ready  to                                                                    
     support efforts on those small and large scales.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     So, in  the next  slide what  you'll see  is a  list of                                                                    
     different  prevention activities  that we  thoughtfully                                                                    
     and  carefully  considered  bringing  into  the  state.                                                                    
     Some of them  actually are generated from  here in this                                                                    
     state, such  as Compass,  which generated from  a group                                                                    
     of  Alaska  Native men  who  worked  and mentored  male                                                                    
     youth 12-18,  sitting down and  saying what can  we do.                                                                    
     What can  we do to  raise a  generation of men  who are                                                                    
     going  to be  respectful  of women,  who  are going  to                                                                    
     understand  that  violence  is  not  the  answer,  that                                                                    
     strength is them being honest,  and with integrity, and                                                                    
     in taking  care of  yourself and  your family  and your                                                                    
     friends.  What  does that look like?  And  they came up                                                                    
     with this  program called Compass,  which is a  12 week                                                                    
     program  where adult  men mentor  male  youth 12-18  in                                                                    
     their daily activities.  So,  whether that's hunting or                                                                    
     fishing, whether  that's providing for their  family in                                                                    
     some other  way, whether that's  going out  and camping                                                                    
     for the  weekend, or playing sports,  or whether that's                                                                    
     cooking  the  bread  for  the   week  for  the  family,                                                                    
     whatever those  activities are, they  are opportunities                                                                    
     to  talk about  what it  means to  be a  respectful and                                                                    
     strong man.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
     There  are other  programs  that  are international  in                                                                    
     scope, "Girls on  the Run" for example,  that we looked                                                                    
     at  and thought  would be  adapted well  to Alaska  and                                                                    
     brought  into  this state.    So,  young girls  in  5th                                                                    
     through 8th grade  have adult female mentors  over a 12                                                                    
     week running course,  and at the end  they actually run                                                                    
     a 5K,  they do  a community  service, they  learn about                                                                    
     what it  means to  be a respectful  young woman  in our                                                                    
     society.     And  how  to  interact,   and  what  their                                                                    
     boundaries  are,  and  how  to  be  productive  in  our                                                                    
     communities.  All  the way to "High  (indisc.)," one of                                                                    
     which  is green  dot, which  you may  be more  familiar                                                                    
     with,  that allows  everyday people  in communities  to                                                                    
     understand about  domestic violence and  sexual assault                                                                    
     to see  for themselves  what their  boundaries are.   I                                                                    
     may be  comfortable in a  group of my peers  if someone                                                                    
     tells an off-color joke or  something that is degrading                                                                    
     to  women,  calling  them  on  that.    I  may  not  be                                                                    
     comfortable if  I see Representative LeDoux  and Keller                                                                    
     fighting, to  go break  them up.   But,  maybe somebody                                                                    
     else  would   be  comfortable  in  doing   that.    So,                                                                    
     [laughter].    But  maybe   I  would  feel  comfortable                                                                    
     calling  911.   So, it  helps me  know what  my comfort                                                                    
     level is, and to know that  I can do something.  Nobody                                                                    
     sort of ...  catch phrase for green dot  is 'Nobody has                                                                    
     to  do everything,  but  everybody  can do  something.'                                                                    
     And it helps you to be able to know what that is.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
5:29:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     I  wanted  to  ...  also   sort  of  focus  on  putting                                                                    
     prevention to work,  which was the summit  that we were                                                                    
     able to  hold in  these intervening years  between 2010                                                                    
     and 2015.   You'll  notice on the  slide [page  7] that                                                                    
     there are,  I'm going  to say  19 communities,  then if                                                                    
     you  count and  I'm  incorrect please  be  kind to  me.                                                                    
     That brought teens together, men  and women, youth, who                                                                    
     were  interested  from   a  community  perspective  and                                                                    
     learning  what it  would look  like and  how to  engage                                                                    
     their entire community in this  effort to create peace,                                                                    
     to  stop domestic  violence and  sexual  assault.   So,                                                                    
     teens  came together,  they put  together a  prevention                                                                    
     plan.   We  had the  ability  to follow  up with  those                                                                    
     plans,  provide  support   to  those  communities,  and                                                                    
     really help  them start effecting the  change that they                                                                    
     knew was possible.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     On the next to the last  slide, I think is "When I'm an                                                                    
     Elder."   You may  have seen these,  a couple  of years                                                                    
     ago  they ran  fairly frequently  on "Gavel  to Gavel."                                                                    
     It  was where  groups  of young  people from  different                                                                    
     areas of the  state got together and  talked about what                                                                    
     they wanted their world to be like.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
5:30:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX noted  that Ms. Morton's testimony had  gotten a bit                                                               
far afield from this bill, and  asked Ms. Morton whether she does                                                               
or  does not  support the  bill, and  whether there  are specific                                                               
portions she supports or does not support.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MORTON  offered  that  she  misunderstood  her  instructions                                                               
because  she   thought  the  committee   wanted  to   hear  about                                                               
prevention and reinvestment,  which is part of  what happens with                                                               
the  savings  of  the  different  areas  of  the  bill  regarding                                                               
reentry.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX explained  there will  be an  entire day  next week                                                               
dedicated to the reinvestment portion of this bill.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. MORTON acknowledged  that she probably got  her wires crossed                                                               
and offered that  her testimony could be a foretaste  of that and                                                               
she would not repeat herself.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MORTON said  that  in  addition to  prevention,  one of  the                                                               
priorities the  victims' services  discussed was  victim services                                                               
in  rural and  remote areas.    She pointed  to recommendation  1                                                               
within the  report, wherein  it holds  the concept  of augmenting                                                               
leadership  for village  elders to  work with  youth in  reducing                                                               
these crimes.  She referred to  the creation of "Safe Homes," and                                                               
noted that  not every community  has a shelter or  crisis center,                                                               
but there are ways in which  rural areas can still ensure safety.                                                               
The  Council  on Domestic  Violence  and  Sexual Assault  (CDVSA)                                                               
expanded  outreach in  assisting communities  to become  aware of                                                               
available services,  and the training  of community  health aides                                                               
to conduct  basic rape exams in  village.  She pointed  to number                                                               
nine,  and  advised  that  the  other  priority  is  to  increase                                                               
services for  child victims  and witnesses.   She  related, "It's                                                               
something that, as  we know in our shelters,  overall, only about                                                               
26  percent  of  the  population that  access  our  services  are                                                               
children.  But  when you look at only those  people accessing our                                                               
shelter services, the number of  children involved jumps up to 44                                                               
percent  of those  who actually  access shelter."   She  stressed                                                               
that  this would  be an  opportunity to  pay better  attention to                                                               
what can be done for children.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
5:34:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TRINA  SEARS, Attorney,  Office of  Victims' Rights,  Legislative                                                               
Affairs, Alaska State Legislature, said  she would like to answer                                                               
the question  of which  aspects of  the bill  help victims.   Ms.                                                               
Sears related  that as  an attorney with  the Office  of Victims'                                                               
Rights, the office opposes almost  everything in the bill.  There                                                               
are some  provisions that  would help victims,  but for  the most                                                               
part in almost all aspects provides  ways to let offenders out of                                                               
jail,  she remarked.   Ms.  Sears then  explained her  background                                                               
with  regard  to prosecuting  sex  crimes  and domestic  violence                                                               
crimes.   She acknowledged  that the committee  has heard  from a                                                               
few victims' advocates who care  about victims in this community.                                                               
The difference,  she point out,  is that  in her office  they are                                                               
all  attorneys  specializing  in  criminal law  and  they  advise                                                               
victims of their statutory and constitutional rights.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
5:37:21 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEARS  said that, unfortunately,  this bill does  not provide                                                               
treatment for those addicted to  drugs, or mentally ill, and this                                                               
bill affects violent and non-violent  offenders alike with almost                                                               
every aspect  of this  bill providing for  less jail  and earlier                                                               
release for  all offenders.   Including,  she pointed  out, those                                                               
convicted of sexual  assault in the first degree  or sexual abuse                                                               
in the  first degree, and that  those who have sex  with children                                                               
under 13 would  get out of jail substantially  earlier under this                                                               
bill.   Another  concern is  that this  bill violates  a victim's                                                               
constitutional  right to  be heard  when  defendants are  pending                                                               
release  from custody,  from bail  to probation  to parole.   Ms.                                                               
Sears  pointed   out  that  every   victim  of  a  crime   has  a                                                               
constitutional right  to be heard  before or after  conviction at                                                               
any proceeding where  the accused being released  from custody is                                                               
considered.  Unfortunately,  there are many aspects  of this bill                                                               
that mandate that  a judge has to release  somebody under certain                                                               
conditions.  She  said the information a victim  would provide to                                                               
the court  at a  proceeding is  extremely helpful  to a  judge, a                                                               
probation  or  parole  officer, thereby  possibly  effecting  the                                                               
conditions  of release.    For example,  she  said, whether  this                                                               
person should  be deemed a  safety risk, oftentimes  victims have                                                               
information  that is  not available  because  many victims  don't                                                               
report, but under this bill the judge's hands are tied.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
5:40:48 PM                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                              
MS.  SEARS  noted  another  concern was  how  this  bill  reduces                                                               
penalties at  all phases.   For example, it redefines  crime such                                                               
that theft will  no longer be punishable by jail  time if it's up                                                               
to $250 in value, and only  on the third conviction could someone                                                               
receive up  to five days  in jail.   She suggested  explaining to                                                               
the  small businesses  that it  takes a  third conviction  before                                                               
someone who  has stolen from  them can get  even one day  in jail                                                               
under this bill.   Currently, in the event someone  fails to show                                                               
up  to court  it's a  misdemeanor offense  and a  felony if  they                                                               
don't  show up  for their  felony court,  which leads  to another                                                               
concern.    She  explained  that  the delay  in  the  system  re-                                                               
victimizes people  because they go  to hearing after  hearing and                                                               
it's continued  and continued, and  they never know  what's going                                                               
to happen.   She stated that this bill  provides little penalties                                                               
for defendants  who fail to show  up and it will  cause mandatory                                                               
continuances of another  30 days because nothing can  happen in a                                                               
felony  case   without  the  defendant   being  present.     This                                                               
legislation  will basically  incentivize  people to  not show  up                                                               
because if they've  been drinking or using drugs,  why would they                                                               
ever  show up  to court  because the  judge and  prosecutor would                                                               
know they were  high and there's no real penalty  for not showing                                                               
up  to  court.    She  stressed  that  the  delays  re-victimizes                                                               
victims.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
5:43:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SEARS  expressed that  the  drug  laws have  been  seriously                                                               
redefined  in  this bill,  such  that  possession of  heroin  and                                                               
cocaine will be a misdemeanor  offense punishable by a maximum of                                                               
30 days in jail, whereas, currently  it's a felony offense with a                                                               
maximum  penalty of  five  years  in jail.    The  bill makes  it                                                               
impossible for a  judge to sentence someone  to treatment because                                                               
they won't be  on felony probation, they won't be  mandated to go                                                               
to any  treatment as a  misdemeanant, and they won't  be required                                                               
to perform  UAs.   This bill  reduces presumptive  sentencing for                                                               
every class of  offense, A felonies, B felonies,  C felonies, and                                                               
misdemeanors are all reduced in  this bill, she said.  Currently,                                                               
if a person is  robbed at gun point, the penalty  is a seven year                                                               
minimum and this  bill reduces it to five years,  it also reduces                                                               
the  penalty  for  being  stabbed  with  a  knife  and  seriously                                                               
injured.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
5:46:00 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE KREISS-TOMKINS  asked whether she perceives  a bad                                                               
person being in jail as a  good thing because they can't reoffend                                                               
and  would make  society safer.    He further  asked whether  she                                                               
believes all  of the current sentencing  statutes are appropriate                                                               
or whether  they should be longer.   He referred to  her concerns                                                               
and requested a more circumspect picture.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
5:47:02 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEARS explained that if this  bill focused on reentry to help                                                               
people become productive, that would  be a start.  Unfortunately,                                                               
the  bill  just  significantly   reduces  sentences  for  people,                                                               
provides  earlier parole  and earlier  probation release.   There                                                               
might be  a provision where,  if you are concerned  about helping                                                               
people reenter society,  that would probably help  them get their                                                               
license back and get a job.   But, she commented, the rest of the                                                               
bill doesn't implement  anything along those lines.   In terms of                                                               
whether  she thinks  jail  is bad  or good,  it  depends.   Under                                                               
current  law, for  people committing  low-level crimes  the judge                                                               
could give them zero jail, and  oftentimes as a prosecutor on the                                                               
low-level felonies, she  would offer less than a  month jail time                                                               
on  something that  could  be up  to five  years  by taking  into                                                               
account factors  such as rehabilitation  that is set  in statute.                                                               
But,  she  related,  this  bill   forgets  another  component  to                                                               
sentencing,  such as  reestablishing  community norms,  community                                                               
condemnation, which  is lost in  this bill.  She  further related                                                               
that jail by  itself isn't necessarily good or bad  as it depends                                                               
on the circumstance,  such as, whether someone is  violent, or is                                                               
a  repeat offender.   Unfortunately,  the  bill sometimes  treats                                                               
everybody the  same, violent and  non-violent, they get  the same                                                               
penalty.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
5:49:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KREISS-TOMKINS asked  Ms.  Sears  to forget  this                                                               
legislation  and to  just consider  current sentencing  laws, are                                                               
there  any  sentencing  laws  she   feels  are  inappropriate  or                                                               
overreaching.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SEARS  asked whether  he  meant  reducing any  sentence  for                                                               
anybody.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KREISS-TOMKINS asked  Ms. Sears  to disregard  HB
205, and further  asked whether there are  any current sentencing                                                               
laws with a strong argument for reducing sentences.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEARS  responded that currently  there are incentives  in the                                                               
law for  people to receive  lower sentences, and she  pointed out                                                               
that the  legislature recently passed  new mitigaters  that apply                                                               
to people  if they  undergo treatment.   As to  whether sentences                                                               
are  already too  high  for specific  crimes,  she remarked  that                                                               
probably not because much is already  built into the law, such as                                                               
allowing youthful  first offenders  to get  zero jail,  or little                                                               
jail for non-violent offenses.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
5:50:16 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX requested her thoughts  regarding the PEW Charitable                                                               
Trusts'  research   that  jail,  to  a   certain  extent,  causes                                                               
recidivism and that jail isn't working for many people.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEARS related that she is  not an expert in statistics, but a                                                               
couple of  the statistics  the PEW  Charitable Trust  offered did                                                               
not consider changes  specific to Alaska.   It didn't necessarily                                                               
consider that  Alaska seriously increased  its sentences  for sex                                                               
crimes.   And,  she  noted,  when they  say  sentences are  going                                                               
higher and higher for A and B  felonies, an A felony sex crime is                                                               
attempting  sexual assault  which is  15 years  minimum, and  a B                                                               
felony sex assault might be  a student having sexual contact with                                                               
their teacher,  and that  penalty has  gone to  five years.   She                                                               
reiterated that they  don't take into account some  of the things                                                               
that are specific to Alaska.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
5:51:39 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KELLER   expressed  that   with  regard   to  the                                                               
commission's  focus  on  victims' rights,  two  roundtables  took                                                               
place  in  September,  the  commission   designed  a  task  force                                                               
specifically  regarding  the  rights  of  victims,  and  victims'                                                               
advocate Commissioner Brenda Stanfill is on the commission.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SEARS   responded  that  her  supervisor,   Taylor  Winston,                                                               
attended   a  roundtable   that  was   after  most   of  the   20                                                               
recommendations were already ...                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
5:52:41 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE KELLER  reiterated there  were two  roundtables in                                                               
September of 2015, according to the report.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEARS  opined that Ms.  Winston flew out-of-town to  attend a                                                               
roundtable for victims.  She put  forth that at the conclusion of                                                               
those  roundtables  were  additional recommendations,  after  the                                                               
initial 20 or 21, and they are not in the bill.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
5:53:21 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KELLER pointed  out that  the 21  recommendations                                                               
were  approved   after  September.    [Alaska   Criminal  Justice                                                               
Commission, Justice Reinvestment Report, dated December 2015.]                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX clarified  that the  reinvestment language  will be                                                               
added  within  another  committee   substitute,  and  it  is  not                                                               
currently in the bill.  She  stressed that the bill will not move                                                               
out of  committee without the critical  reinvestment language and                                                               
without money for the reinvestment.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEARS said  that all she sees  is a zero fiscal  note and the                                                               
bill being  represented to  the public  as a  cost savings.   She                                                               
related  that  she  would  be interested  in  whether  the  state                                                               
actually  reinvests  and  puts   its  efforts  monetarily  toward                                                               
victims' services and  mental health and drug  treatment, and how                                                               
much that will cost.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
5:54:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX  clearly stated  that the fiscal  note is  not zero,                                                               
and reiterated that there is a  fiscal component to this bill and                                                               
there are upcoming appropriate fiscal notes on the bill.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEARS offered that the concerns  of her office are based upon                                                               
what is currently written  in the bill.  In the  event there is a                                                               
proposal  to   significantly  invest  money  into   treatment  or                                                               
victims' services,  the Office of  Victims' Rights  would respond                                                               
but currently no money is reinvested  in this bill.  She remarked                                                               
that if  this bill passes  without that reinvestment,  there's no                                                               
guarantee  there is  even going  to  be any  reinvestment in  the                                                               
future.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
5:55:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX stressed  and  reiterated that  she  is giving  Ms.                                                               
Sears her commitment that this bill  is not reaching the floor of                                                               
the House of Representatives without the reinvestment component.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE CLAMAN  pointed out that  the proposal is  that it                                                               
will save the  state money, but not  without reinvestment because                                                               
the bill won't have its desired  effect.  As a former prosecutor,                                                               
he requested  her perspective  as to whether  the "war  on drugs"                                                               
has worked  by taking more  and more discretion away  from judges                                                               
in terms of sentencing for non-violent drug offenders.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
5:57:18 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SEARS  answered that,  first  of  all, Alaska  doesn't  have                                                               
mandatory  sentences   for  first  time  felony   drug  offenders                                                               
possessing  drugs.   She  said  the typical  sentence  is an  SIS                                                               
[suspended imposition of  sentence] if it's the  first felony and                                                               
maybe a  couple months of jail,  if any.  She  explained that the                                                               
person is on probation for a couple  of years and if they do well                                                               
the  conviction is  set  aside.   The  reason  he  may have  seen                                                               
numbers  of recidivism  and losing  their SIS  is because  people                                                               
can't get off their addiction, she said.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  CLAMAN  restated his  question  and  asked, on  a                                                               
broad societal scale, whether the war on drugs has worked.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEARS  replied that she honestly  is unaware of what  goes on                                                               
in the  rest of the country.   She related that  she was assigned                                                               
to the  drug unit as a  prosecutor, and that it  was difficult to                                                               
get  the  federal government  with  more  serious penalties  than                                                               
Alaska,  to take  over a  drug case.   Usually,  for the  federal                                                               
government to take over a case, a  weapon had to be involved or a                                                               
significant amount  of drugs  or money.   Therefore, a  person is                                                               
generally not  federally prosecuted  in Alaska for  small amounts                                                               
of hard drugs, such as heroin, she said.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
5:58:56 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  CLAMAN referred  to Blakely  v. Washington,  [542                                                             
U.S.  296 (2004)],  and the  changes to  some of  the presumptive                                                               
sentencing  laws   wherein  the  overall  average   sentence  for                                                               
felonies went  up as a result  those laws.  He  asked whether she                                                               
has research that  disagrees with those conclusions,  in terms of                                                               
the broad  overall increase in felony  sentencings statewide over                                                               
the last eight or nine years in Alaska.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEARS asked whether that excludes sex offenses.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  CLAMAN  answered  that   he  is  looking  at  all                                                               
felonies.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
6:00:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEARS  argued that  there are  B felony  sex offenses,  and C                                                               
felony sex  offenses, and  opined that  some of  those statistics                                                               
did not  separate out sex  offenses; therefore,  those statistics                                                               
are not  good.   The Alaska Judicial  Council conducted  a study,                                                               
due  to  be  released  soon, that  would  answer  whether  people                                                               
receiving convictions for drugs  and property crimes are actually                                                               
seeing any jail, she said.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MILLETT said  she  understands  her concerns  and                                                               
offered that as  the sponsor of HB 205,  without the reinvestment                                                               
piece,  treatment, substance  abuse, and  the ability  for a  sex                                                               
offender to  receive treatment in  place she would pull  the bill                                                               
from the  legislature, and she asked  Ms. Sears to work  with her                                                               
to make it a better bill.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
6:02:56 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEARS  continued her testimony  and reiterated that  with all                                                               
presumptive sentencing, the penalties  are being reduced even for                                                               
second  and third  offenders.   The bill  also proposes  reducing                                                               
earlier  on parole,  certain types  of offenders.   For  example,                                                               
mandatory parole is required after  an offender serves one-fourth                                                               
of their  sentence for B and  C felonies, such that  when someone                                                               
burglarizes a  home, it  is a  B felony.   Whatever  sentence the                                                               
judge  gives that  person under  this bill  would be  mandatorily                                                               
released after  serving only one-fourth  of their sentence.   The                                                               
bill, with  respect to sex  offenders, includes a  provision that                                                               
allows  for discretionary  parole after  an offender  serves one-                                                               
fourth of  their sentence.   Currently,  if someone  is sentenced                                                               
for a  crime committed a year  ago, they would serve  100 percent                                                               
of  the sentence.   She  noted  that a  couple of  years ago  the                                                               
legislature took  away good time  for certain sex  offenders, yet                                                               
this bill allows the person to  get out after one-fourth of their                                                               
sentence  which  is  a  significant change  for  victims  of  sex                                                               
crimes.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
6:04:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SEARS  offered significant  concern  that  this bill  allows                                                               
those 50  years old to  get out of  jail after serving  10 years,                                                               
including  sex offenders  and homicide  defendants.   She related                                                               
that she has prosecuted quite a  few sex offenders who were older                                                               
than  55, and  some  were in  wheelchairs  committing sex  crimes                                                               
against  children.    She  said  she  is  open  to  questions  or                                                               
discussions to  make this bill  better because there is  no doubt                                                               
that Alaska's  criminal system  is flawed  and change  is needed.                                                               
However, she  expressed, her office  believes that  change should                                                               
not come  at the expense  of Alaskan's  safety and it  should not                                                               
trample on the  rights of thousands of people  who are victimized                                                               
by crime each year.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                              
CHAIR LEDOUX  stated that  her office will  work with  Ms. Sears,                                                               
particularly after  the reinvestment piece  is added, and  she is                                                               
welcome to return with her comments.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
6:06:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                              
REPRESENTATIVE  KELLER thanked  her  for her  comments and  noted                                                               
that he will  carefully review her testimony because  some of her                                                               
comments need to be addressed on  the record later.  For example,                                                               
he pointed out,  the geriatric element in the  bill only requires                                                               
a hearing, and it does not release anyone.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KREISS-TOMKINS asked  whether she  or her  office                                                               
was involved with  the commission and its public  process, and if                                                               
so, how she contributed to the commission's work.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEARS said that her office was  not invited to be a member of                                                               
the commission, although  her supervisor did attend  at least one                                                               
meeting and  listened in  on some of  the meetings  by telephone.                                                               
She related  that the meeting  her supervisor attended  allowed a                                                               
couple of minutes  for public input for all of  the people there.                                                               
She  opined that  her office  wasn't invited  to speak  initially                                                               
until her testimony here, but she wasn't formally invited.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KREISS-TOMKINS  noted  that  within  her  closing                                                               
comments she  acknowledged that  change is  needed, and  he asked                                                               
the changes  she sees  as necessary  within the  criminal justice                                                               
system.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
6:09:36 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEARS  pointed out that  the commission was  initially tasked                                                               
with looking  at why Alaska has  such a high recidivism  rate and                                                               
addressing that problem.   The commission was  then instructed by                                                               
the  legislature to  reduce the  jail population  by 25  percent,                                                               
which  are  two  different  things.   The  commission,  from  her                                                               
perspective, should have focused and  should focus on why so many                                                               
people  are reoffending,  and  how to  make  probation better  so                                                               
probation  officers  are better  able  to  assist people  to  not                                                               
reoffend, she  offered.  That is  not the focus of  the bill, she                                                               
stressed, as  the focus of the  bill is how to  reduce the prison                                                               
population.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KREISS-TOMKINS commented  that he  would like  to                                                               
hear from a commissioner as to  whether they would agree with her                                                               
statements  because previous  testimony has  been focused  on the                                                               
likelihood  of recidivism  and using  data and  other factors  to                                                               
guide sentencing.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SEARS said  she doesn't  want  to debate  the issue  because                                                               
Representative Kreiss-Tomkins has heard  more testimony that she,                                                               
but challenged where the  bill specifically addresses recidivism.                                                               
She  pointed  out  that  she   disagrees  because  just  reducing                                                               
penalties for  violations, or  violating probation  doesn't focus                                                               
on recidivism.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX  reiterated that  when  the  reinvestment piece  is                                                               
introduced, Ms. Sears will see that it addresses recidivism.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
6:11:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE KELLER expressed that  the committee will continue                                                               
to work on  improving the bill.   He pointed out that  all of the                                                               
Alaska   Criminal  Judicial   Commission's  meetings   were  well                                                               
advertised,  always  open to  the  public,  and people  testified                                                               
during the meetings.   Although, Ms. Sears  didn't say otherwise,                                                               
he wanted  to put on the  record and stress to  everyone that the                                                               
commission was an open, transparent, and collaborative process.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE LYNN  asked the  committee to  define reinvestment                                                               
in  one or  two sentences  for  the public,  which is  to be  the                                                               
salvation of this bill.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
6:12:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE KELLER offered that the  intent is to reinvest the                                                               
money the state saves from  inappropriately locking people up too                                                               
long.  He related that data  has shown that [the current criminal                                                               
system]  isn't  getting  the  results  the  state  had  hoped  in                                                               
programs.  For example, in order  to help the reentry process the                                                               
Parole Board has to be beefed  up, and reinvestment has to happen                                                               
in order  for this to  work.  He  added that the  Alaska Criminal                                                               
Justice   Commission    is   not   finished,   it    made   these                                                               
recommendations as  a starting point  and it is still  a process.                                                               
He  explained  that  the  next  stage  is  implementation,  which                                                               
obviously will  be the reinvestment  element, and there is  a lot                                                               
of interest  in how that  can be reinvested.   The nature  of the                                                               
legislative job  is dealing with  the different interests  on how                                                               
to reinvest or invest, he said.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE LYNN  thanked Ms.  Sears for  her clear  and lucid                                                               
testimony.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX advised that her office will be in touch with her.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
6:17:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ANN SEYMOUR,  Justice Solutions, said  she is a  nationally known                                                               
crime  victim advocate,  and she  helped  facilitate outreach  to                                                               
crime victims, survivors, and  victims' service professionals and                                                               
advocates, throughout  the Alaska Criminal  Judicial Commission's                                                               
work.  Ms. Seymour then  listed her background information within                                                               
her written  testimony provided  to the  committee.   Ms. Seymour                                                               
related  that throughout  the 1990s  she personally  led national                                                               
efforts  to be  tough  on  crime and  to  lengthen sentences  all                                                               
across  the country.   The  justice field  has moved  to evidence                                                               
based practices and she likewise  moved to support justice reform                                                               
that is  smart on crime.   She  said her involvement  in criminal                                                               
justice and corrections  reform is to be  certain victims' voices                                                               
are  heard, and  when the  discussion  is public  safety to  also                                                               
consider  the  individual safety  of  victims  and survivors,  as                                                               
members  of  their communities.    During  her  early days  as  a                                                               
victims'  advocate wherein  victims had  virtually no  rights and                                                               
were an  afterthought in justice  processes if they  were thought                                                               
about at all.  The most  significant change in justice reform and                                                               
reinvestment efforts  is the strategic and  proactive involvement                                                               
of crime  victims and survivors.   Over  the past five  years she                                                               
has   been   involved   in  justice   reinvestment   efforts   in                                                               
approximately 20 states,  and realized that the  needs of victims                                                               
vary widely from  state to state.  She offered  that South Dakota                                                               
focuses on creating a statewide  notification system for victims,                                                               
in  Pennsylvania  one  of the  outcomes  provides  advocates  for                                                               
victims of  juvenile offenders, Hawaii completely  overhauled its                                                               
victim restitution program,  and Oregon holds an  amount of money                                                               
in its statewide domestic and  sexual assault services fund.  She                                                               
noted  there is  consistency in  the fact  that states  that have                                                               
reduced its prison  population have also reduced  its crime rate.                                                               
For example,  beginning 2010, South  Carolina reduced  its prison                                                               
population  by 20  percent and  at the  same time  it has  seen a                                                               
reduction in its crime rate of  over 12 percent.  Beginning 2011,                                                               
Kentucky, reduced its prison population  by 1.6 percent with a 17                                                               
percent reduction in crime rate.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
6:22:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SEYMOUR related  that she  applauds  any bipartisan  justice                                                               
reform  effort and  she  sees that  the  Alaska Criminal  Justice                                                               
Commission's  efforts   have  recognized   the  needs   of  crime                                                               
survivors  and the  commission's early  and strong  commitment to                                                               
hearing the  voices of victims  in Alaska  is where she  came in.                                                               
Her  work began  last  summer,  first reviewing  a  rich body  of                                                               
research demonstrating that  while Alaska had some  of the finest                                                               
victim  assistance programs  in the  nation there  were still  so                                                               
many victims  unserved and underserved.   These  include: victims                                                               
of child  abuse and  neglect; the majority  of Alaskan  women who                                                               
experience  at least  one incident  of intimate  partner's sexual                                                               
violence in their lifetime; and  that the victim's need for legal                                                               
assistance  far outweighs  this state's  capacity to  provide it.                                                               
She  explained that  "we reached  out  to over  50 survivors  and                                                               
victim advocates"  to inform them  about what the  commission was                                                               
trying to  do and invited them  to join discussions to  assist in                                                               
clarifying victims'  most important  needs and concerns.   During                                                               
[the roundtables]  in September,  she had opportunities  to speak                                                               
with many  crime victim survivors,  and met with Butch  and Cindy                                                               
Moore in  person.  She  listened to domestic  violence survivors,                                                               
in particular,  for whom  personal safety  was just  an oxymoron,                                                               
and  she   interviewed  victims'  assistance   professionals  who                                                               
struggle  to  provide  quality  services  to  victims  in  Alaska                                                               
despite not  having enough resources  to do so.   Two roundtables                                                               
held in  Alaska in September,  as opposed to just  one roundtable                                                               
in other states,  wherein tribal elders and  survivors were flown                                                               
in to ensure  that the commission learned  specifically about the                                                               
needs  of  victims  in  Alaska,   Bush  and  remote  communities.                                                               
Overall,  there were  29 survivors  and  advocates attending  the                                                               
roundtable, and  she related that  it is important to  note their                                                               
input  truly  [influenced] the  commission's  work.  She noted  a                                                               
strong  consensus  regarding  the  need  to  strengthen  victims'                                                               
assistance  services in  remote  and  Bush communities,  together                                                               
with a focus  on crime prevention and  bystander intervention and                                                               
the goal of less crime and  fewer victims in Alaska.  She related                                                               
there  was  strong  support for  evidence  based  and  culturally                                                               
competent  programming,   supervision  for   convicted  offenders                                                               
including  batterer's  intervention,  and  restorative  community                                                               
service with the reinvestment piece.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
6:25:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SEYMOUR  opined  that  HB   205  offers  the  foundation  in                                                               
reinvestment    funding   that    can    make   the    roundtable                                                               
recommendations a  reality, and with  its wide range  of victims'                                                               
rights  marks  it one  of  the  most  victim centered  pieces  of                                                               
legislation  she has  seen over  the  past decade.   She  further                                                               
opined that each  victim is unique and it is  impossible to paint                                                               
them all  with a  broad brush.   Her  work is  to be  certain the                                                               
voices of victims, and their  advocates are heard, respected, and                                                               
reflected within public policy.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
6:27:02 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  LYNN surmised  that according  to her  testimony,                                                               
prison populations  decreased because crimes were  redefined, and                                                               
he asked  whether felonies became misdemeanors,  and misdemeanors                                                               
became violations.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEYMOUR responded that she  has worked in 20 different states                                                               
and  every state  is unique  in how  it goes  about reducing  its                                                               
population.   In Alaska, and  most states,  the focus is  on non-                                                               
violent offenders,  alcohol and  drug strategies, and  people who                                                               
can be more effectively supervised  within the community.  Across                                                               
the board,  she said  there has  been a  reduction in  the prison                                                               
populations,  but also  a reduction  in the  actual crime  rates.                                                               
She  said  she  would  provide  the committee  with  data  if  so                                                               
desired.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
6:28:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   LYNN  surmised   that   the  non-violent   crime                                                               
population would be out of  prison, leaving only the more serious                                                               
population in prison,  and asked whether that is why  there was a                                                               
decrease in the prison population.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEYMOUR  said yes, in  most states.   She offered  to provide                                                               
overviews  of   specific  strategies  other  states   have  used,                                                               
although  the commission  had much  of that  information when  it                                                               
began its foundation efforts.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
6:29:18 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  CLAMAN referred  to her  testimony regarding  the                                                               
reduction in crime  as well as some states seeing  a reduction in                                                               
its prison  population.  He  opined that when people  discuss the                                                               
crime  rate  in a  state,  it  is  typically  a function  of  the                                                               
Department  of Justice  statistics collected  state by  state and                                                               
tracked with a fair amount  of detail; the prison statistics come                                                               
from each  state's Department of  Corrections.  He  asked whether                                                               
that is also  her understanding of the  statistics she references                                                               
and that when discussing a reduction  in crime it is actually the                                                               
Department of  Justice statistics  and not something  coming from                                                               
individual states.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEYMOUR  said she would  double-check but opined the  data is                                                               
coming from  individual states.   She  reminded the  committee of                                                               
her examples  from South Carolina  and Georgia because  they were                                                               
the  first two  states  where  she was  involved  in victims  and                                                               
justice reinvestment.   There has been a history  of those states                                                               
seeing the  reduction she spoke  of and, she reiterated  she will                                                               
double-check and provide the committee with the information.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  CLAMAN  asked her  to  check  on it  because,  in                                                               
Alaska, each  time it receives a  reference on the crime  rate it                                                               
comes from  Washington, D.C.,  and not from  Juneau.   He pointed                                                               
out that he  would like to know if those  other referenced states                                                               
are  doing it  as an  internal state  analysis, or  getting their                                                               
crime statistics from those published.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEYMOUR said she would clarify it tomorrow.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
6:31:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
BRENDA STANFILL,  Executive Director, Interior Alaska  Center for                                                               
Non-Violent  Living, said  she is  a commissioner  on the  Alaska                                                               
Criminal Justice  Commission as  a victim  advocate, and  is also                                                               
the executive  director of  the Interior  Alaska Center  for Non-                                                               
Violent Living.   The  governor's office selected  her to  sit on                                                               
the commission  and that  did not  mean she  was the  only person                                                               
that could  have input  into victim  advocacy.   The commission's                                                               
process  was  interactive  whereby   the  commissioners  and  the                                                               
audience participated,  and the commissioners were  enthused that                                                               
all voices  were heard and  not just  the commission members.   A                                                               
large area the commission looked  at is victims' rights, which is                                                               
tremendously important,  and the  commission tried to  keep those                                                               
rights at the  forefront with the issue of  victims' rights being                                                               
considered throughout  the entire process,  she said.   The three                                                               
issues  considered   were  pretrial,  sentencing   and  community                                                               
supervision.     Fifteen  years  ago,  from   a  victim  advocacy                                                               
perspective, she  would be fighting  tooth and nail to  stop this                                                               
from going  forward, and would  be advocating for  hard penalties                                                               
and  holding people  accountable  because that  is  the only  way                                                               
people  change.   Throughout the  years, she  said, it  was clear                                                               
that jail changes no one because  "my little guys in the shelter"                                                               
grew up and  they are now the men in  her batterer's intervention                                                               
program, some  are dead after  firing on law  enforcement, and/or                                                               
are  hooked on  meth and  stealing from  everyone.   In addition,                                                               
these  people cannot  get the  services they  need so  when their                                                               
mothers tell  her that  little Johnny, who  you've known  for his                                                               
whole  life, needs  to get  into treatment,  she can't  help him.                                                               
For  instance, Fairbanks  does not  have  mental health  services                                                               
available to  an un-resourced  person unless  they try  to commit                                                               
suicide.    The  state  is  failing  on  the  side  of  providing                                                               
treatment  services   and  uses   all  of   its  funds   for  the                                                               
incarceration of  people, and yet  the people are not  coming out                                                               
of  prison different.    Ms. Stanfill  acknowledged  that she  is                                                               
afraid to  move away from  jail because  it's what she  knows and                                                               
believed is  supposed to happen  because when growing up  that is                                                               
what she was taught.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
6:36:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS. STANFILL  related that  in reviewing  the data  and research,                                                               
the state  can achieve  public safety and  reduce crime  by doing                                                               
things  differently   and  making  certain  that   resources  are                                                               
available  to provide  treatment.    She turned  to  the area  of                                                               
pretrial  release  and pointed  out  that  victims are  extremely                                                               
represented within  the bill.   The current bail system  allows a                                                               
person out  on bail if they  have money and their  release is not                                                               
based  upon risk,  or what  is going  on.   Yet, in  the event  a                                                               
person  doesn't  have money  they  would  probably sit  in  jail.                                                               
Pretrial release  is part  of the reinvestment  the state  has to                                                               
create  and continue  to engage  in that  [reinvestment] process,                                                               
she said.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
6:37:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  STANFILL  advised  that pretrial  release  means  that  some                                                               
people would  be released  on their  own recognizance  (OR) which                                                               
does not  mean that the victim  does not have a  voice, rather it                                                               
means a person  would be released with conditions.   In the event                                                               
a  person  is charged  with  a  low-level  crime, if  the  victim                                                               
describes  the  reality of  a  situation,  the judge  can  impose                                                               
conditions in  an attempt  to keep  that victim  safe.   The bill                                                               
does not read  that a person is released with  no conditions such                                                               
as breathalyzer tests  or to check in with the  24/7 program, she                                                               
explained,  it's that  the person  will  not be  required to  put                                                               
money down  in order to get  out on bail.   She further explained                                                               
that  the  risk  assessment  assists  in  determining  whether  a                                                               
defendant can safely be released.   In the event the defendant is                                                               
determined to  be a high  risk offender they  may not get  out of                                                               
jail  and communities  will  be  safer, which  is  better than  a                                                               
defendant just posting bail with money and getting out.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS.  STANFILL  noted that  within  the  area of  sentencing,  the                                                               
question before the  commission was whether the state  had to use                                                               
jail or could use other  methods, specifically separating out the                                                               
violent  and   non-violent  offenders.     She  noted   that  the                                                               
commission knew  it would have to  dive into an in-depth  look at                                                               
the  legislative  level, such  as  what  level of  offenders  are                                                               
eligible  for   administrative  parole   without  a   hearing  or                                                               
geriatric parole.   An issue considered under SB  91, was raising                                                               
some  of   the  maximum  probation  terms   limits,  wherein  the                                                               
commission recommended five years,  and victim advocates were not                                                               
sure  whether they  felt more  comfortable with  ten years.   She                                                               
noted these are the type of  dialogues that have taken place, and                                                               
no one  said, right out  of the gate,  that this thing  is ready.                                                               
For instance,  victims' advocates believed they  had made certain                                                               
child porn was  not a violation, and due to  wording language the                                                               
crime was actually  still listed as a violation.   She reiterated                                                               
that in-depth  digging is ongoing  to be certain  the legislature                                                               
crosses things  out and  doesn't miss  the boat.   As  a victims'                                                               
advocate,  she  opined,  the  criminal   justice  system  can  be                                                               
conducted  better, can  achieve safety,  and be  certain victims'                                                               
voices are heard.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
6:40:02 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MS.  STANFILL  reiterated  that  the  state  can  make  long-term                                                               
changes  in Alaska  by executing  reinvestment.   She pointed  to                                                               
Lauree  Morton's testimony  such that  within Alaska's  last five                                                               
years of intensive prevention efforts,  it experienced 3,000 less                                                               
incidents of victimization in one  year.  As a victims' advocate,                                                               
she said she is willing to  give up the current sentences of days                                                               
in jail in order to  provide the prevention and reentry services,                                                               
with  victims  as part  of  the  process,  on  the front  end  of                                                               
reentry.  She  related that some of the  information, during this                                                               
committee  meeting,  did  not  come  across  in  the  manner  the                                                               
commission discussed, and  she looks forward to  more dialogue in                                                               
being certain  everything has  been discussed.   She  thanked the                                                               
committee for putting reinvestment at the top of its priority.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
6:42:27 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MILLETT  reiterated   that  the  state's  current                                                               
criminal  justice system  is not  working, and  that reinvestment                                                               
aims at changing  outcomes for the prison  population and reentry                                                               
so people do not  return to prison.  The point of  the bill is to                                                               
take  data driven  information and  turn it  into a  result based                                                               
bill, she said.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX opened public testimony.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
6:44:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MADISEN DUSENBURY  said she represents  the Dusenbury  family and                                                               
other victims.  Ms. Dusenbury read her testimony as follows:                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     As she  said, first of all,  I'd wanna ... I'd  like to                                                                    
     thank you guys for giving  me the opportunity to speak.                                                                    
     I am  obviously a little  bit nervous, I've  never done                                                                    
     this before.   As she said,  I am the daughter  of Jeff                                                                    
     Dusenbury.   He was a man  who lived and was  killed in                                                                    
     south  Anchorage by  a drunk  driver  in a  hit-and-run                                                                    
     collision.   I flew down  to Juneau today  because this                                                                    
     is  something  that  I  am  passionate  about,  certain                                                                    
     portions  of this  crime bill.    And I  would like  my                                                                    
     voice to be heard.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     As I said, I'm obviously  no expert in criminal law, at                                                                    
     all.  I only speak to  you guys as someone whose father                                                                    
     was killed  by negligent  behavior, and whose  life was                                                                    
     affected daily  by the decisions made  for our criminal                                                                    
     justice system.  I speak  to Representative Millett, as                                                                    
     well, as  you are  my family's  district representative                                                                    
     and a sponsor  of this bill.  I hope  that you all take                                                                    
     my testimony into consideration when moving forward.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     For anyone who  is not familiar, thank  you [accepted a                                                                    
     tissue], with  the case, my  dad was killed on  July of                                                                    
     2014 by a  young woman named, Alexandra Ellis.   It was                                                                    
     a  Saturday morning  and my  dad was  out on  his usual                                                                    
     morning  bike ride,  when Ellis  driving backwards  hit                                                                    
     him with  her truck,  proceeded into  a park,  and then                                                                    
     fled  the scene.   She  had gotten  out of  her second-                                                                    
     round of  rehab weeks  prior, yet was  intoxicated from                                                                    
     drugs and  alcohol when she killed  him.  My mom  and I                                                                    
     have  been to  court  since then  for  trials on  eight                                                                    
     different occasions,  and our  case is still  not over.                                                                    
     Each time that  we go to court  it's really emotionally                                                                    
     draining and stressful.  Having  to re-live my father's                                                                    
     death and hear  the person who killed him  speak and to                                                                    
     see her in court is  obviously very upsetting.  As well                                                                    
     as seeing  pictures of  his bicycle  of where  his head                                                                    
     impacted the truck is very  traumatizing for me.  To me                                                                    
     it's  ....  exemplary  of  re-victimizing  the  victim,                                                                    
     reopening a wound  and pouring salt into it  again.  In                                                                    
     the last week, five months  after Ellis was supposed to                                                                    
     remand to  jail, the judge and  prosecution agreed that                                                                    
     Ellis will only  have to serve 60 to 90  days about, in                                                                    
     jail for  killing my  father and  leaving him  there to                                                                    
     die.    If  that  isn't outrageous  enough,  it  is  my                                                                    
     understanding  that if  this bill  would  have been  in                                                                    
     place, Ellis  would essentially be serving  no time for                                                                    
     killing  my father  due  to  the administrative  parole                                                                    
     that  allows  criminals  to serve  only  one-fourth  of                                                                    
     their sentence  in conjunction  with the  Nygren credit                                                                  
     that she was granted.   Along with not serving any jail                                                                    
     time,  this bill  also allows  good behavior  credit on                                                                    
     probation, from what  I understand, potentially cutting                                                                    
     her probation  time in half.   And if she  violates her                                                                    
     probation,  it's  also  my understanding  that  if  she                                                                    
     violates  her  probation,  like is  caught  behind  the                                                                    
     wheel with  alcohol that  she will  only have  to serve                                                                    
     three days in jail.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     I don't understand how a  probationary period with such                                                                    
     lenient   violation   consequences   hold   ...   holds                                                                    
     criminals accountable.   To  me, a  probationary period                                                                    
     is  supposed  to  help rehabilitate  people  back  into                                                                    
     society.   So,  it doesn't  make  sense to  me that  by                                                                    
     cutting criminals'  probation time  in half, I  feel it                                                                    
     is cutting the rehabilitation time in half was well.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
     The  sentence  originally  imposed  on  Ellis  and  the                                                                    
     changes made  to it on her  probationary period through                                                                    
     this  crime  bill don't  offer  my  family closure,  in                                                                    
     fact, it is  insulting to us.  My mom  and I have never                                                                    
     been  into retribution  or revenge.   We've  never been                                                                    
     one to  say, throw  the books at  Ellis.   I understand                                                                    
     that my dad  is gone and nothing can change  that.  All                                                                    
     I  ever wanted  was just  ...  [crying].   All we  ever                                                                    
     wanted was justice.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
6:49:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX asked Ms. Dusenbury if she would like to take a                                                                    
break.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS. DUSENBURY responded "No, thank you though," and continued                                                                   
reading her testimony as follows:                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     All we ever wanted  was justice, objectively handed out                                                                    
     by the court,  and we hoped, thank  you, [Ms. Dusenbury                                                                    
     was  handed  a tissue]  with  the  attention this  case                                                                    
     gained  our  state  would  use  it  as  a  platform  to                                                                    
     society, especially  the youth, that  reckless behavior                                                                    
     such  as  driving  under   the  influence  and  killing                                                                    
     someone  are  very  serious  offenses  that  hold  very                                                                    
     serious  consequences.     I  understand  that   it  is                                                                    
     important   to  rehabilitate   a  criminal   to  be   a                                                                    
     contributing member  of society;  however, I  also feel                                                                    
     it  should  serve as  some  sort  of deterrent  to  our                                                                    
     community and to our youth.   Do we continuously try to                                                                    
     rehabilitate people like Ellis,  regardless of how many                                                                    
     times they have tried and  failed rehab at the victims'                                                                    
     expense?    To  me  this bill  just  validates  that  a                                                                    
     criminal's  chance of  rehabilitation  has become  more                                                                    
     important than  the victims.   I'm  confused, honestly,                                                                    
     how  our  elected   government  officials  can  support                                                                    
     certain  pieces of  this bill,  such  as the  shortened                                                                    
     sentencing  time, and  the shortened  probation period.                                                                    
     Mainly   I'm   confused   because,  if   I   understand                                                                    
     correctly, you guys are supposed  to our voice.  If you                                                                    
     look at any media article  online you will see hundreds                                                                    
     of   comments,  and   they're  all   overwhelmingly  in                                                                    
     opposition  of this  lenient sentence.   Our  community                                                                    
     has come  together and  created certain  petitions, and                                                                    
     there's  about  9,000  signatures on  these  petitions.                                                                    
     They  are  people  who  are   angry  at  the  one  year                                                                    
     sentence.   I can only  imagine how outraged  they'd be                                                                    
     if  they knew  Ellis  would essentially  serve no  jail                                                                    
     time, if  this bill would have  been in place.   I want                                                                    
     to  know who  is  supposed to  represent  and work  for                                                                    
     these 9,000 people?   Who is supposed  to represent and                                                                    
     work for  me, and for my  family?  If this  bill passes                                                                    
     and the consequences of crime  become even more lenient                                                                    
     then I lose all hope  that people will reconsider their                                                                    
     actions  when participating  in mischief  and negligent                                                                    
     behavior.  It's in my  opinion that this bill works for                                                                    
     criminals  and against  victims.   And it  doesn't just                                                                    
     seem unfair to me or  to other victims, it seems unfair                                                                    
     to society.   I don't ...  I don't think it's  ... just                                                                    
     for  our  state  to  sway   towards  the  deference  of                                                                    
     criminals.   I feel  like it re-victimizes  the victims                                                                    
     and I feel  like it risks the public's  safety just to,                                                                    
     I guess,  reduce prison population.   Brenda, who spoke                                                                    
     before  me,  said that  she  wanted  to have  input  of                                                                    
     victims so, like  I said, I hope that you  guys take it                                                                    
     into  consideration   when  moving  forward   with  the                                                                    
     process and with looking at  it more specifically.  I'm                                                                    
     finished.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
6:52:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  CLAMAN offered  that  her father  was his  riding                                                               
buddy  and her  father  is in  his  thoughts all  the  time.   He                                                               
explained that  this is a  complicated bill, and Alaska  has huge                                                               
problems including determining the number  of people in jail, how                                                               
long to  keep people in  jail, how to  keep the most  violent and                                                               
dangerous  people off  the streets,  and  rehabilitate those  who                                                               
have potential to contribute to society.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
6:53:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR LEDOUX put forth that  her testimony was extremely powerful                                                               
and  she offered  her condolences.   Chair  LeDoux explained,  "I                                                               
lost  ...  I lost  a  husband  ... a  husband  and  a son  to  an                                                               
automobile  accident many,  many years  ago.   But, listening  to                                                               
your  testimony brings  all of  that  back.   I'll reiterate  the                                                               
comments of  my colleague, and my  friend, Representative Claman,                                                               
it's really complicated."                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. DUSENBURY  said she  understood, and  asked the  committee to                                                               
consider  unique cases  in moving  forward,  and to  look at  the                                                               
specifics of this.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MILLETT  said  that   Ms.  Dusenbury's  voice  is                                                               
impactful and  important, and  noted there  is a  balance between                                                               
protecting  victims,  honoring her  father,  and  also finding  a                                                               
pathway forward.   She asked  Ms. Dusenbury  to work with  her in                                                               
moving forward.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
6:56:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The committee took an at-ease from 6:56 p.m. to 7:01 p.m.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
7:01:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KARA  NELSON, Director,  Haven House,  said  she is  a person  of                                                               
long-term recovery,  and supports HB  205.  She related  that she                                                               
specifically  supports  reducing the  number  of  prison beds  in                                                               
order  to  free  up  the funds  for  reinvestment  into  Alaska's                                                               
reentry  support  services,  specifically  for  substance  abuse,                                                               
detox, treatment  detox, housing, and employment.   She explained                                                               
that Haven  House is a program  for women coming directly  out of                                                               
prison, and also  a recovery residence.   Several items addressed                                                               
in  the  bill,  including  the reinvestment  piece,  as  well  as                                                               
providing reentry support for release,  is crucial to the success                                                               
of  Alaskans   released  back  into   their  communities.     She                                                               
emphasized the  importance of the reinvestment  piece in bringing                                                               
substance abuse and mental health  disorder assistance inside and                                                               
outside of the program.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  LEDOUX  advised  that  the   reinvestment  piece  will  be                                                               
discussed next week because the  public testimony portion on this                                                               
bill is being continued.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
7:04:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ANTHONY  BIELER,  Peer  Support  Specialist,  Cook  Inlet  Tribal                                                               
Council  (CITC),  related that  he  had  been  a 20  year  heroin                                                               
addiction and in  2004 moved from New York City  to Juneau to get                                                               
away  from  drugs;  however,  he   became  hooked  on  the  pills                                                               
available in Juneau at the time.   He explained that within a few                                                               
years he was in  jail and charged with a felony at  the age of 48                                                               
for the first time in his  life, with no opportunity to bail out.                                                               
Prior  to the  trial he  was scared  into believing  his sentence                                                               
would be  20 years, but was  given a six year  sentence with four                                                               
years  suspended,  and  he  spent   six  months  at  Lemon  Creek                                                               
Correctional Center and another ten  months at the half-way house                                                               
in Juneau.   Almost  immediately, he  related, he  inquired about                                                               
treatment,  and  was  advised  of  ASAP  [Alcohol  Safety  Action                                                               
Program],  but  was  told  he  had to  get  on  a  waiting  list.                                                               
Although, he was  able to participate in some  treatment while at                                                               
the halfway house, the opportunity  to attend treatment in Juneau                                                               
did  not come  up  until  two days  before  being  released.   He                                                               
stressed  that prior  to  being arrested  and  becoming a  felon,                                                               
Rainforest Recovery was available to dry  out but that a detox or                                                               
a methadone program was not available  in Juneau.  He said he was                                                               
looking  for Suboxone  or something  similar to  actually recover                                                               
and become employable.  After release,  and being a felon, it was                                                               
almost impossible for him work  other than construction, although                                                               
things are now slowly getting better.   Recently, he said, he was                                                               
hired on  the spot with a  handshake at Home Depot  and Sears and                                                               
ten  days  later  received  two   letters  stating  that  he  was                                                               
terminated because  his background report  advised that he  was a                                                               
felon.   He thanked  the committee for  the opportunity  to speak                                                               
and that  he supports HB 205  because things have to  change.  He                                                               
reiterated that at  48 years old he became a  felon for the first                                                               
time in his  life with no resources available to  help him before                                                               
or after jail.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
7:10:02 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MAUDE BLAIR, Alaska Federation of  Natives, noted that the Alaska                                                               
Criminal  Justice Commission  passed a  comprehensive package  of                                                               
policy  recommendations,  and this  bill  addresses  some of  the                                                               
recommendations.  She pointed out  that a disproportionate number                                                               
of   Alaska  Natives   are  currently   confined,  and   make  up                                                               
approximately  15   percent  of   the  state's   population,  but                                                               
represent   36  percent   of   the   state's  pretrial   inmates.                                                               
Currently,  approximately 50  percent  of all  of  the people  in                                                               
prison have not even been  sentenced, there is no law enforcement                                                               
in Alaska's  smaller villages, and  that access to the  courts is                                                               
limited  to  hub   villages.    She  expressed   that  access  to                                                               
attorneys, legal aid, and someone  to assist in understanding the                                                               
legal system is even harder to  get in some of these economically                                                               
depressed   areas.     As  Ms.   Stanfill  referred,   these  are                                                               
economically depressed areas  wherein a person has no  job and no                                                               
money  to make  [bail], so  that person  will sit  in jail.   She                                                               
remarked that due  to this criminal justice reform  there will be                                                               
a  disproportionately positive  impact  on Alaska  Natives.   She                                                               
described this  legislation as  a good  start toward  helping the                                                               
legal   system  function   well   and,   as  earlier   mentioned,                                                               
reinvestment is  important in targeting  the social ills  and the                                                               
difficulties   that   may    cause   unlawful   behaviors,   plus                                                               
reinvestment  assists  in  helping people  to  become  productive                                                               
members of society.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
[SB 250 was held over.]                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
7:13:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
There being no further business before the committee, the House                                                                 
Judiciary Standing Committee meeting was recessed at 7:13 p.m.                                                                  
until March 23, at 1:00 p.m.                                                                                                    

Document Name Date/Time Subjects