Legislature(2017 - 2018)GRUENBERG 120

10/24/2017 06:00 PM House JUDICIARY

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Audio Topic
06:02:14 PM Start
06:02:29 PM SB54
09:16:19 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+= SB 54 CRIME AND SENTENCING TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Public Testimony --
                    ALASKA STATE LEGISLATURE                                                                                  
               HOUSE JUDICIARY STANDING COMMITTEE                                                                             
                        October 24, 2017                                                                                        
                           6:02 p.m.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Matt Claman, Chair                                                                                               
Representative Zach Fansler, Vice Chair                                                                                         
Representative Jonathan Kreiss-Tomkins                                                                                          
Representative Gabrielle LeDoux                                                                                                 
Representative David Eastman                                                                                                    
Representative Chuck Kopp                                                                                                       
Representative Charisse Millett (alternate)                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative Lora Reinbold                                                                                                    
Representative Louise Stutes (alternate)                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
OTHER MEMBERS                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                              
Representative Geran Tarr                                                                                                       
Representative Justin Parrish                                                                                                   
Representative Andy Josephson                                                                                                   
Representative Cathy Tilton                                                                                                     
Representative George Rauscher                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
COMMITTEE CALENDAR                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
CS FOR SENATE BILL NO. 54(FIN)                                                                                                  
"An  Act  relating  to  crime   and  criminal  law;  relating  to                                                               
violation of  condition of release; relating  to sex trafficking;                                                               
relating  to sentencing;  relating to  imprisonment; relating  to                                                               
parole;  relating to  probation;  relating to  driving without  a                                                               
license;  relating   to  the   pretrial  services   program;  and                                                               
providing for an effective date."                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     - HEARD & HELD                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
PREVIOUS COMMITTEE ACTION                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
BILL: SB  54                                                                                                                  
SHORT TITLE: CRIME AND SENTENCING                                                                                               
SPONSOR(s): SENATOR(s) COGHILL                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
02/10/17       (S)       READ THE FIRST TIME - REFERRALS                                                                        
02/10/17       (S)       JUD, FIN                                                                                               
02/17/17       (S)       JUD AT 1:30 PM BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)                                                                      
02/17/17       (S)       Heard & Held                                                                                           
02/17/17       (S)       MINUTE(JUD)                                                                                            
02/24/17       (S)       JUD AT 1:30 PM BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)                                                                      
02/24/17       (S)       -- MEETING CANCELED --                                                                                 
03/01/17       (S)       JUD AT 1:30 PM BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)                                                                      
03/01/17       (S)       Heard & Held                                                                                           
03/01/17       (S)       MINUTE(JUD)                                                                                            
03/03/17       (S)       JUD AT 1:30 PM BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)                                                                      
03/03/17       (S)       Heard & Held                                                                                           
03/03/17       (S)       MINUTE(JUD)                                                                                            
03/06/17       (S)       JUD AT 1:30 PM BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)                                                                      
03/06/17       (S)       -- MEETING CANCELED --                                                                                 
03/08/17       (S)       JUD AT 1:30 PM BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)                                                                      
03/08/17       (S)       Heard & Held                                                                                           
03/08/17       (S)       MINUTE(JUD)                                                                                            
03/10/17       (S)       JUD AT 1:30 PM BELTZ 105 (TSBldg)                                                                      
03/10/17       (S)       Moved CSSB 54(JUD) Out of Committee                                                                    
03/10/17       (S)       MINUTE(JUD)                                                                                            
03/13/17       (S)       JUD RPT CS  3DP 1NR NEW TITLE                                                                          
03/13/17       (S)       DP: COGHILL, COSTELLO, KELLY                                                                           
03/13/17       (S)       NR: MEYER                                                                                              
03/28/17       (S)       FIN AT 9:00 AM SENATE FINANCE 532                                                                      
03/28/17       (S)       Heard & Held                                                                                           
03/28/17       (S)       MINUTE(FIN)                                                                                            
03/28/17       (S)       FIN AT 1:30 PM SENATE FINANCE 532                                                                      
03/28/17       (S)       Heard & Held                                                                                           
03/28/17       (S)       MINUTE(FIN)                                                                                            
03/31/17       (S)       FIN AT 9:00 AM SENATE FINANCE 532                                                                      
03/31/17       (S)       Heard & Held                                                                                           
03/31/17       (S)       MINUTE(FIN)                                                                                            
03/31/17       (S)       FIN AT 1:30 PM SENATE FINANCE 532                                                                      
03/31/17       (S)       -- MEETING CANCELED --                                                                                 
04/03/17       (S)       FIN RPT CS  1DP 4NR 2AM NEW TITLE                                                                      
04/03/17       (S)       NR:    MACKINNON,   BISHOP,    DUNLEAVY,                                                               
                         MICCICHE                                                                                               
04/03/17       (S)       AM: HOFFMAN, OLSON                                                                                     
04/03/17       (S)       DP: VON IMHOF                                                                                          
04/03/17       (S)       FIN AT 9:00 AM SENATE FINANCE 532                                                                      
04/03/17       (S)       Moved CSSB 54(FIN) Out of Committee                                                                    
04/03/17       (S)       MINUTE(FIN)                                                                                            
04/07/17       (S)       TRANSMITTED TO (H)                                                                                     
04/07/17       (S)       VERSION: CSSB 54(FIN)                                                                                  
04/08/17       (H)       READ THE FIRST TIME - REFERRALS                                                                        
04/08/17       (H)       STA, JUD, FIN                                                                                          
05/04/17       (H)       STA AT 3:00 PM GRUENBERG 120                                                                           
05/04/17       (H)       <Bill Hearing Canceled>                                                                                
10/23/17       (S)       FOURTH SPECIAL SESSION BILL - SCR 401                                                                  
10/23/17       (H)       FOURTH SPECIAL SESSION BILL - SCR 401                                                                  
10/23/17       (H)       STA REFERRAL WAIVED Y25 N12 E2 A1                                                                      
10/23/17       (H)       STA AT 12:30 AM GRUENBERG 120                                                                          
10/23/17       (H)       -- MEETING CANCELED --                                                                                 
10/23/17       (H)       JUD AT 1:00 PM GRUENBERG 120                                                                           
10/23/17       (H)       Heard & Held                                                                                           
10/23/17       (H)       MINUTE(JUD)                                                                                            
10/24/17       (H)       JUD AT 9:00 AM GRUENBERG 120                                                                           
10/24/17       (H)       JUD AT 6:00 PM GRUENBERG 120                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
WITNESS REGISTER                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MIKE MCCARTHY                                                                                                                   
Homer, Alaska                                                                                                                   
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, offered                                                                     
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
BURKE WALDRON                                                                                                                   
Bethel Chief of Police                                                                                                          
Bethel, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, offered                                                                     
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TODD SMOLDON                                                                                                                    
Matanuska-Susitna, Alaska                                                                                                       
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, offered                                                                     
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
NATHAN JACKSON                                                                                                                  
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHARLES MCKEE                                                                                                                   
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
LYNN WILLIS                                                                                                                     
Eagle River, Alaska                                                                                                             
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
JANET McCABE                                                                                                                    
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, offered                                                                     
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
BUTCH MOORE                                                                                                                     
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
JOANNE ERIKSEN                                                                                                                  
Fairbanks, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, offered                                                                     
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MEGAN STIMPSLE                                                                                                                  
Kawerak, Inc.                                                                                                                   
Nome, Alaska                                                                                                                    
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, offered                                                                     
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
BYRON CHARLES                                                                                                                   
Ketchikan, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CRIS EICHENLAUB                                                                                                                 
Eagle River, Alaska                                                                                                             
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
KATIE SEVIGNY                                                                                                                   
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, offered                                                                     
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
LYNETTE CLARK, Chairman                                                                                                         
Alaska Independence Party                                                                                                       
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, offered                                                                     
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
VANESSA VENEZIA, Medical Director                                                                                               
Fairbanks Memorial Hospital Behavioral Health Unit                                                                              
Fairbanks, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, offered                                                                     
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PHIL SHANAHAN, Attorney                                                                                                         
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, offered                                                                     
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CYNTHIA STROUT, Attorney                                                                                                        
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ALBERT BERKE                                                                                                                    
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
DON HABEGAR, Community Coordinator                                                                                              
Juneau Reentry Coalition                                                                                                        
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WILL KRONICK                                                                                                                    
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TALIA EAMES, Coordinator                                                                                                        
Central Council                                                                                                                 
Tlingit and Haida Second Chance Reentry Program                                                                                 
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHRISTINE FURCY                                                                                                                 
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JOSE DELEGADE                                                                                                                   
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NINA GARRISON                                                                                                                   
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MICHAEL ALBERTSON                                                                                                               
North Pole, Alaska                                                                                                              
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CAROL JANE ROOK                                                                                                                 
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
FRANCESSCA ALLEGREZZA                                                                                                           
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
KRIS WILSON                                                                                                                     
North Pole, Alaska                                                                                                              
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
ELIZABETH FLEMING, Attorney                                                                                                     
Kodiak, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NATASHA SINGH                                                                                                                   
Fairbanks, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CAROL CARMAN                                                                                                                    
Palmer, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHERYL KAJBAN                                                                                                                   
Palmer, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TARA BURNS                                                                                                                      
Community United for Safety and Protection (CUSP)                                                                               
Fairbanks, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CRYSTAL GODBY                                                                                                                   
Community United for Safety and Protection (CUSP)                                                                               
Fairbanks, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SEN TAN                                                                                                                         
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SHERRY MILLER                                                                                                                   
Eagle River, Alaska                                                                                                             
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MELINDA GANT                                                                                                                    
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
EDITH GRUNWALD                                                                                                                  
Palmer, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TOM BRAUND                                                                                                                      
Sutton, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
JAMES CHRISTIE, Attorney                                                                                                        
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
AMANDA HARBER                                                                                                                   
Bethel, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislature.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
STEVE ST. CLAIR                                                                                                                 
Matanuska-Susitna, Alaska                                                                                                       
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
ABBY ST. CLAIR                                                                                                                  
Matanuska-Susitna, Alaska                                                                                                       
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
RAYMOND O'NEILL                                                                                                                 
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CATHLEEN McLAUGHLIN, Director                                                                                                   
Partner's Re-Entry Center                                                                                                       
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NORIA CLARK                                                                                                                     
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
TAMMY DUFF                                                                                                                      
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
RHONDA PITKA, Chief                                                                                                             
Beaver, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LEONARD MARTIN                                                                                                                  
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
LOI RICKER                                                                                                                      
Wasilla, Alaska                                                                                                                 
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
LINDA SHARP                                                                                                                     
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
DEBORAH McINTYRE                                                                                                                
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
PETE MLYNARIK, Chief of Police                                                                                                  
Soldatna, Alaska                                                                                                                
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MORGAN WHITE, Attorney                                                                                                          
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
VICKI WALLNER, Founder                                                                                                          
Stop Valley Thieves                                                                                                             
Palmer, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, offered                                                                     
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
RUBY DEE BUCHANON                                                                                                               
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
PAT TYSON                                                                                                                       
Wasilla, Alaska                                                                                                                 
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SHAWN WILLIAMS                                                                                                                  
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 91, offered                                                                     
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MIKE SHAFFER, Attorney                                                                                                          
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MAXINE DOOGAN                                                                                                                   
Community United for Safety and Protection                                                                                      
Fairbanks, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, offered                                                                     
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
SEAN STRAUSS                                                                                                                    
Juneau, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, offered                                                                     
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JOHN POWERS, Owner/Operator                                                                                                     
Tudor Bingo Center                                                                                                              
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
LARRY PARISH                                                                                                                    
Fairbanks, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, offered                                                                     
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
AUDREY CUCULLU, Executive Coordinator                                                                                           
Kenai Peninsula Re-Entry Coalition                                                                                              
Kenai, Alaska                                                                                                                   
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KERRI BOSSARD                                                                                                                   
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION STATEMENT:  During the hearing of SB 54, testified.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
ELIZABETH THOMAS                                                                                                                
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MARY NANUWAK                                                                                                                    
Bethel, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MARNA SANFORD, Attorney                                                                                                         
Fairbanks, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TERRIA WALTERS, Founder/President                                                                                               
Fallen Up Ministries                                                                                                            
Palmer, Alaska                                                                                                                  
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
support for the legislation.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MICHELLE BROWN                                                                                                                  
Anchorage, Alaska                                                                                                               
POSITION  STATEMENT:    During  the hearing  of  SB  54,  offered                                                             
opposition to the legislation.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
ACTION NARRATIVE                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
6:02:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR MATT  CLAMAN called the House  Judiciary Standing Committee                                                             
meeting to order  at 6:02 p.m.   Representatives Claman, Fansler,                                                               
Eastman,   Kopp,  and   Millett  (alternate   for  Representative                                                               
Reinbold) were  present at  the call  to order.   Representatives                                                               
Kreiss-Tomkins  and   LeDoux  arrived  as  the   meeting  was  in                                                               
progress.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
                  SB  54-CRIME AND SENTENCING                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
6:02:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR CLAMAN announced  that the only order of  business would be                                                               
SB 54 CS  FOR SENATE BILL NO. 54(FIN), "An  Act relating to crime                                                               
and criminal law; relating to  violation of condition of release;                                                               
relating to sex trafficking; relating  to sentencing; relating to                                                               
imprisonment;   relating  to   parole;  relating   to  probation;                                                               
relating to driving  without a license; relating  to the pretrial                                                               
services program; and providing for an effective date."                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
[CHAIR CLAMAN  returned the committee  to public testimony  on SB
54.]                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
6:03:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MIKE McCARTHY advised  that he has been a resident  of Alaska for                                                               
30  years, and  was involved  in the  criminal justice  system in                                                               
Oregon and Alaska as a  police officer, a detective, a supervisor                                                               
in investigations  for 166  branches of a  national bank,  and he                                                               
holds a  master's degree in  the administration of justice.   Mr.                                                               
McCarthy related  that he  supports SB 54,  and pointed  out that                                                               
the two primary factors causing  the present crime spikes involve                                                               
the opioid epidemic and Alaska's  fiscal crisis, which are joined                                                               
together.  He  described that Senate Bill 91 was  a worthy effort                                                               
to curb crime,  but without adequate funding it  could only fail,                                                               
and SB 54 is  one step toward a solution.   He explained that the                                                               
other step is adding fiscal  certainty by putting Alaska's fiscal                                                               
house  in order.    Namely, he  advised, a  state  income tax  to                                                               
finance  public   safety  resources,  which  would   include  law                                                               
enforcement,  prosecutors, pretrial  and probation  services, and                                                               
rehabilitation programs.   It has  been said, he  commented, that                                                               
Alaska has no  statewide tax, but in reality,  every Alaskan pays                                                               
a tax in  terms of their loss of quality  of life whenever crimes                                                               
occur.  He  then pointed to a recent carjacking  where the victim                                                               
was  pulled out  of a  vehicle at  gun point  and pistol-whipped.                                                               
Although, he related, there was a  recent bright bit of news when                                                               
Bryan  Schroder,  United  States  Attorney for  the  District  of                                                               
Alaska, announced that the two  perpetrators who robbed Anchorage                                                               
coffee stands recently, would be  prosecuted for interfering with                                                               
state  commerce  because "the  coffee  beans  were not  grown  in                                                               
Alaska."    By that  same  reasoning,  he remarked,  the  vehicle                                                               
involved  in  the  recent  carjacking  was  not  manufactured  in                                                               
Alaska,  so that  should qualify  for a  federal prosecution,  as                                                               
well.  He said  he is fully in support of SB  54, and there needs                                                               
to be zero tolerance for violence and drug trafficking.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
6:05:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
BURKE WALDRON,  Chief of  Police, said  he represents  the Bethel                                                               
Police Department  and the  City of  Bethel, and  offered support                                                               
for  SB  54.   He  said  that  he  would  like to  reiterate  the                                                               
testimony  of the  previous speaker  from Homer,  in that  Senate                                                               
Bill  91 [passed  in the  Twenty-Ninth Alaska  State Legislature]                                                               
was  a  noble  effort  in   attempting  to  save  money  and  the                                                               
reinvestment  of  that money  in  reducing  future crimes.    The                                                               
methodology [of  criminal justice reform] requires  an investment                                                               
of  money  upfront  except,  he pointed  out,  with  the  state's                                                               
current  fiscal crisis,  the state  does  not have  the money  to                                                               
invest  upfront at  this time.   Also,  he explained,  not enough                                                               
time  has been  invested  at  this point  to  fully evaluate  the                                                               
effects that Senate  Bill 91 will have had on  crime rates in the                                                               
state.   In his  capacity as  Chief of Police,  he said  he could                                                               
advise that,  at the  street level,  it is  not uncommon  to have                                                               
criminals laugh "in  our faces and tell us that  they will be out                                                               
of jail  before we  are, because  of Senate Bill  91."   He added                                                               
that he does  not think it has  been good for the  kids that many                                                               
offenses  were   reduced  to  violations  that   previously  were                                                               
misdemeanors.   In Bethel, he  related, an issue most  obvious to                                                               
him  are when  parents or  guardians  endanger the  welfare of  a                                                               
minor  by   being  intoxicated  when   "they  are   charged  with                                                               
protecting kids."   At this  point, he  related, that issue  is a                                                               
non-arrestable offense,  so the police  officer can only  write a                                                               
citation.  He  reminded the committee, that it takes  a long time                                                               
to get other resources to protect  the kids, and there is lack of                                                               
follow through due to the low-level  of the crime.  He reiterated                                                               
that he  speaks in support  of SB 54 because  it is a  good first                                                               
step in repairing some of the ineffectiveness of Senate Bill 91.                                                                
                                                                                                                                
6:08:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TODD  SMOLDON  advised he  was  testifying  on behalf  of  fellow                                                               
Alaskans  and himself,  and related  that  thousands of  Alaskans                                                               
have  expressed  great  concern  over Senate  Bill  91,  and  the                                                               
current discussion is  how to fix a bad law  that should not have                                                               
been  passed in  the  first  place.   Hundreds  of Alaskans  have                                                               
spoken out asking  the legislature to fix Senate  Bill 91 except,                                                               
he related,  no amount  of amendments can  fix the  problems with                                                               
Senate Bill 91.  He stated  that the chair of the House Judiciary                                                               
Standing Committee had fast-tracked  the discussions in committee                                                               
to such  a degree that  the representatives on the  committee are                                                               
unable  to receive  their amendments  from Legislative  Legal and                                                               
Research Services.   Members of  both bodies have  suggested that                                                               
Alaskans  are "just  emotional  and unfairly  blaming  SB 91  for                                                               
increasing crime," and he described  that comment as insulting to                                                               
the  people who  have testified  in townhall  meetings throughout                                                               
the state.   Alaskans are  intelligent, and he related  that they                                                               
are aware of  the number of factors that have  contributed to the                                                               
increase of  crime in this  state, such  as: the downturn  in the                                                               
economy; the  partial taking of  the PFD by governor;  the opioid                                                               
crisis;  and the  crime that  accompanies the  fiscal and  opioid                                                               
crisis.  He opined that  the absence of any significant penalties                                                               
for low-level crimes is the number  one factor in the increase of                                                               
crime  in Alaska.    As  a teacher,  he  knows  that if  negative                                                               
behavior is not punished, there  will be more negative behaviors,                                                               
and  parents know  that a  wayward child  must be  punished.   He                                                               
described that SB 54 will not  fix the problems created by Senate                                                               
Bill 91,  because it is not  a revenue problem, it  is a priority                                                               
problem.  Alaska's  state government has grown at  twice the rate                                                               
of inflation and  the population, and the  [legislature] needs to                                                               
repeal Senate  Bill 91, and  find money  to support a  real crime                                                               
bill.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
6:10:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NATHAN JACKSON advised that he  was testifying on his own behalf,                                                               
noting that there  are good provisions in Senate Bill  91, and SB
54.  He offered testimony as follows:                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     One of the  things that SB 54 did, and  I'm not sure if                                                                    
     you are aware  of it, but it  stopped the retroactivity                                                                    
     of Senate Bill 91.  When  a person is on parole ... So,                                                                    
     when a  person is on  parole, and from prior  to Senate                                                                    
     Bill  91, what  SB  54 did  was make  it  to where  you                                                                    
     didn't get  30-day for  30-day credit  retroactively on                                                                    
     parole.   So, if  like say, for  a person  like myself,                                                                    
     had  good  behavior  for  five,  six,  seven  years  on                                                                    
     parole, you no longer got  that credit until 2017.  So,                                                                    
     everything  before then  didn't  count.   I do  believe                                                                    
     that was  a mistake.  A  person who did good  should be                                                                    
     allowed  to get  off  early.   That  was monumental  to                                                                    
     certain  people  like  myself.   I  spent  15-years  in                                                                    
     prison  for a  crime I  did not  commit, and  I've been                                                                    
     fighting that since  April 12, 1989.  And,  I've had to                                                                    
     deal with  the judicial system  non-stop.  And,  one of                                                                    
     the things that  Senate Bill 91 did  was, finally, make                                                                    
     it  to where  the probation  and parole  department has                                                                    
     limits of  what they can put  you in jail for.   Three-                                                                    
     day, ten-day,  and thirty-day was monumental  to people                                                                    
     staying  out of  jail,  keeping  their employment,  and                                                                    
     keeping  their   house.    That  one   thing  alone  is                                                                    
     monumental  for  prisoners.   The  one  thing too  that                                                                    
     should be  changed in Senate  Bill 91, which is  a good                                                                    
     thing and a bad thing, is  it should be where parole is                                                                    
     added  and  not just  probation.    It only  stipulates                                                                    
     probation and it should be both.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
6:13:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHARLES  MCKEE  advised that  he  will  forward a  document  that                                                               
discusses  that the  financial problems  Alaska is  incurring are                                                               
primarily due  to the  incorporation of the  people.   He advised                                                               
that people  are depletable assets  and they have  been monetized                                                               
into the federal  reserve fund and the dividends are  paid out to                                                               
the  privileged few.   He  said, "We're  sucked into  a corporate                                                               
structure"  that  utilizes foreign  currency  "so  we had  to  be                                                               
debased,"  and that  falls to  the  Alaska Bar  Association.   He                                                               
described the  Alaska Bar Association  as a  private organization                                                               
running the  Alaska Court System  and the state  legislature, and                                                               
"our governor  essentially is CEO,  so a corporation  cannot pass                                                               
law only policy."   He offered an account of  his experience when                                                               
"my  property was  accused  of alleged  biting  someone," and  he                                                               
defended his property.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
6:16:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LYNN WILLIS  advised that  he was testifying  on his  own behalf,                                                               
and  said that  criminal  administration shall  be  based on  the                                                               
following:                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     The   need  for   protecting   the  public,   community                                                                    
     condemnation  of  the  offender,   the  rights  of  the                                                                    
     victims of  crimes, restitution from the  offender, and                                                                    
     the principle of reformation.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
MR. WILLIS said that state  constitutional guidance requires both                                                               
wisdom  and  money.     The  Alaska  government   can  no  longer                                                               
substitute  the   latter  for   the  former,  and   whatever  the                                                               
legislature does  regarding this issue,  its actions will  have a                                                               
significant fiscal impact, either  to the government, the public,                                                               
or both.   That fact  cannot be ignored,  he said, and  to please                                                               
allow vetting  of this legislation  to take place in  the [House]                                                               
Finance  Committee.   The  legislative  history  of  SB 54  is  a                                                               
classic  example   of  how  [the  legislature]   has  effectively                                                               
disenfranchised Alaskans  by closing  the public forum  of debate                                                               
using secrecy  and an abuse of  the hearing process.   He pointed                                                               
out that  last year, SB  54 was "apparently  going to be  held to                                                               
death  and  then following  an  apparent  epiphany by  a  special                                                               
interest group,  it now must  be rushed into existence."  That is                                                               
perhaps  the worst  motive for  legislation, he  described.   The                                                               
constitution has provided the framework,  and now a solution must                                                               
be implemented for this issue facing all Alaskans, he said.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
6:18:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JANET McCABE  advised that she  is testifying on her  own behalf,                                                               
and is in  support of SB 54  because the legislation is  a way to                                                               
"not to  throw the baby  out with the  bath water."   When Senate                                                               
Bill 91 was adopted in  2016, the legislature promised to correct                                                               
problems identified during the hearings.   She explained that due                                                               
to this  promise, knowledgeable people  studied the  problems and                                                               
drafted  the solutions  contained in  SB  54 that  is before  the                                                               
committee today.   She pointed out that under SB  54, Alaska will                                                               
save  money,  continue  to  hold  people  accountable  for  their                                                               
crimes, and continue  to reduce crime and incarceration.   As the                                                               
State  of Texas  demonstrated, she  related,  "it is  best to  be                                                               
smart on crime, not just tough on crime."                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
6:19:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
BUTCH MOORE pointed  to the June 2016,  Practitioners Guide, page                                                               
10, written  by the Alaska  Criminal Justice Commission  for drug                                                               
charges, and  paraphrased as follows:  "Possession in  any amount                                                               
of a  IA substance  used to  be a Class  C felony,  and now  is a                                                               
Class A  misdemeanor.  The same  for a Class IIA,  which would be                                                               
cocaine or  meth, has  changed to  a Class  A misdemeanor  ... It                                                               
further  states  that, it  cannot  be  jailtime  on a  charge  of                                                               
possession  unless you've  been charged  and convicted,  not just                                                               
the first  time, but the second  time."  Mr. Moore  noted that he                                                               
finds   this    information   concerning   because    often   law                                                               
enforcement's  response  is,  even  if the  person  is  arrested,                                                               
charged,  prosecuted, and  convicted,  jailtime  is not  imposed,                                                               
which makes it  difficult to get to a third  conviction where the                                                               
person can  do jailtime.  He  offered that if someone  enters his                                                               
daughter's   home  with   heroin,   and  Mr.   Moore  calls   law                                                               
enforcement,  the  person  should  go to  jail.    Several  state                                                               
troopers  advised  him  that  they  are  not  confiscating  drugs                                                               
because when they  do take the drugs, the offender  then goes out                                                               
and steals  someone's personal property  to purchase  more drugs.                                                               
Therefore,  he noted,  law enforcement  is  not confiscating  the                                                               
drugs because it  cannot arrest the person, and he  asked that an                                                               
amendment be  drafted to  address this  particular issue  of drug                                                               
possession.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
6:22:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JOANNE  ERIKSEN  advised that  she  is  a  senior citizen  and  a                                                               
grandmother, and she  is concerned that law  enforcement must use                                                               
"kid gloves"  because the judicial system  releases the criminals                                                               
so quickly, rather  than putting the criminals behind  bars.  She                                                               
opined  that  people  should  be  held  more  accountable  (audio                                                               
difficulties)  solve  crime by  letting  the  jails be  revolving                                                               
doors, noting that she agrees with  most of the callers and wants                                                               
to  see a  tough crime  bill.   Although, she  said, she  was not                                                               
quite sure about a tax unless it  would be a sales tax that would                                                               
be advantageous  for Alaskans because it  would affect absolutely                                                               
everyone.  She  stressed that property taxes  have increased, and                                                               
the people have been taxed "until  we can't stand it anymore and,                                                               
of  course,  the PFD  raid  didn't  help  at  all either."    She                                                               
expressed concern  about her children, grandchildren,  and great-                                                               
grandchildren, and  the type  of society they  will be  raised in                                                               
where criminals receive  more of the benefit of the  doubt in the                                                               
judicial system.   She pointed out  that unless the hands  of law                                                               
enforcement are untied  and it can lock these people  up and keep                                                               
them locked up,  "you are not really serving any  purpose for law                                                               
enforcement at  all."  People  will take  the law into  their own                                                               
hands because they feel the law  is not protecting them, and they                                                               
have to protect themselves.   She asked that the committee repeal                                                               
and rethink SB 54, and make judicial punishments stronger.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
6:24:26 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MEGAN  STIMPSLE,  Kawerak,  Inc.,  advised she  was  speaking  on                                                               
behalf of  Kawerak Inc., which  is a  consortium of 20  tribes in                                                               
the Bering  Strait Region.   She expressed Kawerak's  support for                                                               
SB 54,  and more importantly  its strong support for  Senate Bill                                                               
91.  She asked that the  committee consider the importance of the                                                               
society that  is being built  in Alaska, and consider  whether it                                                               
should be built  upon the punitive system or  built upon criminal                                                               
justice reform.  She stressed  that legislators must consider the                                                               
people affected by the criminal justice system.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
6:25:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
BYRON CHARLES noted that the  legislature is trying to figure out                                                               
what  to do  about "these  problems," but  mental health  people,                                                               
tribal  organizations,  local  agencies, and  the  United  States                                                               
Marshal  should  be  included  because  the  issues  involve  the                                                               
processing  system  that  falls  under the  Constitution  of  the                                                               
United  States.   Presently,  he said,  a  cumbersome problem  is                                                               
being  created  and the  legislature  is  setting itself  up  for                                                               
serious lawsuits  in the future.   The legislature  should create                                                               
positive programs  and solutions for the  problems, and encourage                                                               
those  people willing  to do  something  with their  lives.   The                                                               
legislature should  not be making  the decisions, he  stated, law                                                               
enforcement,  mental health  agencies,  tribal organizations  and                                                               
corporations,  and local  state agency  people, should  be making                                                               
the  decisions.   He  said that  "I would  say,  bring back  your                                                               
assessment to  me, bring  back your  evaluation, bring  back your                                                               
report  ... and  we will  make  a decision  of what  needs to  be                                                               
resolved."                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
6:28:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CRIS EICHENLAUB  advised that  he was speaking  on behalf  of his                                                               
family.  He then  pointed out that the people of  Alaska are in a                                                               
state of  emergency because Senate  Bill 91 has  created anarchy,                                                               
and it  is the criminals  that like Senate  Bill 91.   He related                                                               
that  he had  attended many  townhall meetings,  and suggested  a                                                               
total repeal of Senate Bill 91  because little of it makes sense,                                                               
and start  over with a "three  strikes and you're out  law."  The                                                               
State  of  Massachusetts  has  that system.    Under  the  Alaska                                                               
system,  criminals use  Senate Bill  91  to fill  the jails  with                                                               
drugs, and a  person will go to jail overnight  to deliver drugs.                                                               
He  offered a  scenario  of someone  being  jailed overnight  for                                                               
stealing a  vehicle, and  going out the  next night  and stealing                                                               
another  vehicle  while  still  on  bail  for  the  first  stolen                                                               
vehicle.  He stated that he  would like a special emergency order                                                               
wherein victims  can sue people stealing  vehicles and [property]                                                               
because Alaskans do not have time for this band-aid."                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
6:30:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  EASTMAN asked  whether  he was  referring to  the                                                               
"three strikes, you're out" law  passed in California, or another                                                               
law.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
[Mr. Eichenlaub had hung up.]                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
6:31:10 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KATIE SEVIGNY advised  that she is a resident of  Anchorage and a                                                               
long-time small business  owner.  She remarked  that under Senate                                                               
Bill 91,  her business has fallen  prey to petty theft  and crime                                                               
in a much higher degree than she  has seen in over 10 years.  The                                                               
crime continues elevating because  there are no consequences, and                                                               
yesterday her  business fell prey  to quite a bit  of counterfeit                                                               
money.   These  are  felony offenses,  she  related, but  because                                                               
criminals are  getting away  with these  small baby  steps, their                                                               
steps  are  getting   bolder,  and  it  is   happening  all  over                                                               
Anchorage.  She pointed out  that small business owners fall prey                                                               
to these  crimes and the  owners cannot sustain  their businesses                                                               
if  they are  constantly  being robbed,  and thieves  threatening                                                               
young  employees.   Consequently,  she  advised, young  employees                                                               
will not work nights and customers  feel unsafe.  Senate Bill 91,                                                               
was a decision  to save money rather than  reinvesting money into                                                               
rehabilitation and  the bill does not  completely follow through.                                                               
It  will never  work for  small businesses,  she advised,  unless                                                               
dollars are put behind the  legislation for rehabilitation, as in                                                               
the State  of Texas  where dollars  were put  into rehabilitation                                                               
programs  that are  helping people  with low  incomes.   She said                                                               
that the legislation  was "simply made the way  that we typically                                                               
make  decisions,  which  is  to save  money  instead  of  growth,                                                               
instead of  putting it into  our communities."  She  advised that                                                               
she really  wished the legislature  would start  making decisions                                                               
that  gives  Alaskans a  future  that  "grew its  economy  versus                                                               
always just making cuts that eventually keep on hurting us."                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR CLAMAN  asked whether Ms.  Sevigny does, does  not, support                                                               
SB 54.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS. SEVIGNY responded that SB 54  is just a step, and Senate Bill                                                               
91 should  be repealed until the  money is available to  make the                                                               
legislation work.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
6:34:10 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LYNETTE CLARK, Chairman, Alaska  Independence Party, advised that                                                               
she was testifying on her own  behalf.  She acknowledged that she                                                               
has  heard  noble  arguments from  law  enforcement  officers  in                                                               
support of SB 54, as compared to  Senate Bill 91.  This year, she                                                               
opined, Senate  Bill 91 was the  preferred "tar baby," and  SB 54                                                               
was  put in  a  drawer  in July  and  "never  resurrected as  the                                                               
answer."   During the time SB  54 was in the  drawer, she related                                                               
there was no public input and  now it has become the saving grace                                                               
for law  and order.   She advised that  Senate Bill 91  should be                                                               
completely repealed,  and SB 54 should  be tabled due to  lack of                                                               
input.  She stressed that no  income or payroll tax should be put                                                               
on working  Alaskans, and that  the legislature should  gavel out                                                               
and hash this  out with their constituents, and  bring a solution                                                               
forward in January 2018.  Changes  must be hammered out, while at                                                               
the  same   time  considering  the  Alaskans   affected  by  this                                                               
legislation, "and for  this to be effective, you have  to have it                                                               
coming  out of  our  mouths,  the ones  that  are  living in  the                                                               
villages  and in  the  small  cities and  the  small towns,"  she                                                               
expressed.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
6:36:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
VANESSA  VENEZIA, Medical  Director, Fairbanks  Memorial Hospital                                                               
Behavioral    Health   Unit,    advised    that    she   is    an                                                               
adult/adolescent/child  psychiatrist,  and the  Medical  Director                                                               
and   Inpatient   Psychiatrist   for   the   Fairbanks   Memorial                                                               
Hospital(FMH),  and  she  supports  SB  54.    Dr.  Venezia  then                                                               
requested  the adoption  of  Amendment  24 to  SB  54 because  it                                                               
specifically addresses  the importance  of mental  health 72-hour                                                               
evaluations conducted  solely in  behavioral health units.   This                                                               
amendment affords  patients the opportunity  to have 72  hours to                                                               
be   evaluated   before   a   30-day   commitment   is   pursued.                                                               
Inappropriate  evaluations  lead  to   one  of  the  two  things:                                                               
patients   are   either   inappropriately   released   into   the                                                               
communities  and  pose  a  public safety  risk;  or  their  civil                                                               
liberties  are   taken  away   inappropriately  after   a  30-day                                                               
commitment is rendered.   She explained that  the Fairbanks local                                                               
district court  interpreted the current statute  to indicate that                                                               
a 72-hour  evaluation begins  when a  patient enters  a hospital.                                                               
This precedent was  set forth in a February 2017  ruling, and she                                                               
stressed  that if  this  precedent is  accepted  by other  courts                                                               
around the  state, the hospitals  in remote areas  that currently                                                               
do not  have mental  health units, such  as Barrow  and Kotzebue,                                                               
would be  forced to release  these patients into  the communities                                                               
before being  seen and evaluated  by a mental  health specialist.                                                               
Currently, she advised,  there are only 20 beds  in Fairbanks, 80                                                               
beds in  Anchorage, and under 20  beds in Juneau that  can accept                                                               
Title 47  patients.   She reiterated her  request for  support of                                                               
Amendment 24, and  thus affording patients an  opportunity for an                                                               
evaluation in a behavioral health unit.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
6:39:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE KOPP surmised that, as  to a 72-hour evaluation, a                                                               
court ruling  directed that  once a  patient enters  an emergency                                                               
room, that  72-hour clock starts  running even when  a behavioral                                                               
health  unit is  not  available  to evaluate  that  patient.   He                                                               
further surmised  that it  may take  a day or  longer to  get the                                                               
patient into a behavioral health facility to be evaluated.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
DR.  VENEZIA  responded  that  Representative  Kopp  was  exactly                                                               
correct,  and pointed  out  that  if she  worked  in a  community                                                               
without a  psychiatric facility,  she would  have to  undergo the                                                               
logistics  of transferring  the  patient to  a behavioral  health                                                               
facility.   Dr.  Venezia also  pointed  out that  as the  Medical                                                               
Director for  the Fairbanks  Memorial Hospital  Behavioral Health                                                               
Unit, it  frequently does  not have enough  beds or  capacity for                                                               
the Fairbanks  community members.   She  explained that  when the                                                               
Alaska Psychiatric Institute closes,  which happens on a somewhat                                                               
regular basis, the Fairbanks  Memorial Hospital Behavioral Health                                                               
Unit then accepts  patients from the Anchorage area  and all over                                                               
the state.   The Fairbanks  catchment area  is from Nenana  up to                                                               
the North  Slope, including Barrow,  and that  is a wide  area of                                                               
responsibility, she advised.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
6:41:18 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PHIL  SHANAHAN,  Attorney, said  he  was  testifying on  his  own                                                               
behalf  and  that he  supports  the  Senate's  version of  SB  54                                                               
because it is  a common-sense approach to the  necessary fixes in                                                               
Senate Bill  91.   In response  to concerns  that Senate  Bill 91                                                               
somehow caused  an uptick  in crime, he  advised that  within the                                                               
last couple of  days, the University of  Alaska Anchorage Justice                                                               
Center  released important  studies that  included: a  video that                                                               
tracked  the  trends  on   various  offenses,  including  vehicle                                                               
thefts,  shoplifting, and  burglaries.   Those studies  show that                                                               
the crime rates  were rising prior to Senate  Bill 91, explained,                                                               
but they are still lower than they  were in the 1990s for some of                                                               
those offenses.   He stressed that Senate Bill 91  was created by                                                               
a  group of  folks with  all backgrounds  on the  Alaska Criminal                                                               
Justice Commission which included  law enforcement, mental health                                                               
entities, and Native  organizations in Alaska.   The PEW Research                                                               
Center  provided actual  evidence-based research  to support  the                                                               
proposals made  to the legislature because  the previous criminal                                                               
justice system  was not  working.  For  example, he  pointed out,                                                               
for many  years Alaska's  laws had treated  drug possession  as a                                                               
felony  and  yet, that  did  not  stop  drug crimes  or  property                                                               
crimes.    The  state  needed  Senate Bill  91  to  do  what  was                                                               
intended,   which   was   to    reinvest   those   dollars   into                                                               
rehabilitation  and treatment.   He  stressed that  SB 54  does a                                                               
great job  of addressing some of  the glitches in Senate  Bill 91                                                               
when  it was  first adopted,  and SB  54 can  fix those  glitches                                                               
without performing  an overhaul of  Senate Bill 91.   Clearly, he                                                               
expressed, repealing Senate  Bill 91 would be a big  mistake.  He                                                               
reminded the committee that certain  components of Senate Bill 91                                                               
take effect  this January, and  those upcoming components  are an                                                               
important aspect  of the  legislation and  will help  make Senate                                                               
Bill 91 even more effective.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
6:43:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CYNTHIA  STROUT, Attorney,  advised  that she  is  a 35-year  old                                                               
Alaska  resident and  (audio  difficulties).  Ms. Strout  offered                                                               
support for SB 54 because it  takes care of some glitches in what                                                               
would be expected  when there is an overhaul of  laws.  She urged                                                               
the committee  to not add  amendments to SB  54 because a  lot of                                                               
Senate Bill 91  had not yet taken effect.   The legislation needs                                                               
time  to recoup  the  cost savings  the  legislation provides  so                                                               
money can  be put into  treatment, and  into the types  of things                                                               
Alaska is severely deficient.   She asked that the committee pass                                                               
SB 54 as  it is, and to not  amend it in any manner.   The Alaska                                                               
Criminal  Justice  Commission  spent  many, many  hours  of  time                                                               
studying  the research  on  what  is effective  in  terms of  the                                                               
criminal  justice system,  and  she asked  the  committee to  let                                                               
Senate Bill 91  work for a while so the  state could recoup those                                                               
resources.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR CLAMAN advised that the  next testifier is Albert Berke and                                                               
he  is  communicating  using  a   sign-language  machine  and  an                                                               
interpreter.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
6:45:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ALBERT BERKE testified as follows:                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
     Hi.   My name  is Albert  Berke.   I live  in Anchorage                                                                    
     here and  I am representing  myself.  I  am requesting,                                                                    
     under the federal law of  the American Disabilities Act                                                                    
     (ABA),   that  here   in   Alaska  legislation   (audio                                                                    
     difficulties) and mind  you there is few,  but there is                                                                    
     a  dire need  to  have them  receive  accessible --  to                                                                    
     receive access through  sign-language interpreters.  To                                                                    
     receive  access  through   the  phone  via  video-phone                                                                    
     technology like  we are connected here  this way, right                                                                    
     now  tonight.   How I  am connected  to you  right now.                                                                    
     Here it is imperative that  we have this access.  There                                                                    
     is  a dire  need  for this  access, not  in  -- in  the                                                                    
     prison system,  but everywhere else.   So,  deaf people                                                                    
     have this  right, they deserve  to have  access through                                                                    
     sign-language  interpreters  and   --  and  the  prison                                                                    
     system   needs   training   on   how   to   work   with                                                                    
     interpreters.   The  system, how  it is  now, is  -- is                                                                    
     inappropriate in dealing  with this -- this  need.  So,                                                                    
     both 91  -- SB 91,  and SB  54, need to  be recognizing                                                                    
     any   amendments,  anything   at   all,   need  to   be                                                                    
     recognizing  our Americans  with  Disabilities Act  and                                                                    
     giving  deaf people  the access  that  they require  by                                                                    
     means  of  sign-language interpreters  and  video-phone                                                                    
       technology.  I've been frustrated with hearing the                                                                       
     lack of access that deaf people have especially with,                                                                      
     in any situation, prison or not.  Thank you.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
6:48:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DON  HABEGAR, Community  Coordinator,  Juneau Reentry  Coalition,                                                               
advised that  the Juneau Reentry  Coalition supports  the state's                                                               
efforts in  implementing smart justice  as defined by  the Alaska                                                               
Criminal  Justice  Commission.    The  Juneau  Reentry  Coalition                                                               
supports  the implementation  of statewide,  and community  level                                                               
treatment  and  services  designed  to  increase  the  successful                                                               
return  of individuals  into Alaska's  communities, and  decrease                                                               
recidivism rates.   He said  that the coalition  supported Senate                                                               
Bill  91, recognizing  it  was an  expansive  change to  Alaska's                                                               
criminal justice laws that may  require refinements, and SB 54 is                                                               
part of that refinement process.   The coalition asks that during                                                               
the  deliberations on  SB  54,  to stay  mindful  of the  justice                                                               
precepts and  avoid reverting back to  the "lock em up  and throw                                                               
away the key" mentality.   He asked that the legislation continue                                                               
with the  application of community reinvestment  into appropriate                                                               
treatment and services.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
6:49:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
WILL KRONICK advised  he is speaking on his own  behalf, and that                                                               
the issues of Senate Bill  91 appear largely technical and, thus,                                                               
largely a distraction.   The problems attributed to  this bill as                                                               
to the rise in crimes and  rise in addiction, predate the passage                                                               
of Senate  Bill 91, not to  mention that the entire  bill has not                                                               
yet  gone  into effect,  notably,  the  pretrial probation.    In                                                               
short, he  commented, this  all sounds  like a  way to  avoid the                                                               
real task at hand, which  is creating a comprehensive fiscal plan                                                               
and  pushing  it  through  the Senate.    Clearly,  he  remarked,                                                               
further cuts  equal fewer services  for our Alaskan  families and                                                               
the families he works with as  a social worker, lower incomes for                                                               
Alaskans whose jobs are cut  or cuts to wages, thereby, worsening                                                               
the state's  recession.  He asked  that the committee pass  SB 54                                                               
quickly and  move on to  passing a comprehensive fiscal  plan for                                                               
Alaska.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
6:50:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TALIA  EAMES,  Coordinator,  Tlingit   and  Haida  Second  Chance                                                               
Reentry Program, advised that she  is a 10-year decorated veteran                                                               
of  the  United States  Air  Force,  and  a coordinator  for  the                                                               
Tlingit   and  Haida   Second  Chance   Reentry   Program.     As                                                               
coordinator, she advised  that she has met with over  300 men and                                                               
women returning  from incarceration, and has  seen first-hand how                                                               
people  can thrive  with support  and services.   She  noted that                                                               
Senate  Bill 91  was  designed  to invest  in  programs that  can                                                               
reduce crime  in this  state while addressing  the root  cause of                                                               
crime and incarceration,  often tied to substance  use and mental                                                               
health disabilities.   The Tlingit and Haida  reentry program had                                                               
to close  its doors  this month  because it  did not  receive its                                                               
continued grant funding.  Unfortunately,  she related, this means                                                               
there is no longer a reentry  program in Juneau, the hub of those                                                               
individuals   being   released   in  Southeast   Alaska.      The                                                               
reinvestment  dollars described  in  Senate Bill  91  need to  be                                                               
realized in order  to support these programs  that promote public                                                               
safety, and  the legislation must  be fully implemented  for this                                                               
to  happen.   She  acknowledged that  the  compromises needed  in                                                               
Senate  Bill  91,  took  place   via  SB  54,  and  stressed  the                                                               
importance of  remembering that  every measure  of this  bill was                                                               
backed by  research and data.   She reminded this  committee that                                                               
research and  data has shown  the benefits of a  criminal justice                                                               
system  focused on  rehabilitation, reintegration  of non-violent                                                               
offenders,   and  community-based   supervision   for  those   on                                                               
probation and parole.  Although, she  said she had heard a lot of                                                               
misinformation  tonight,  she  challenged   the  members  of  the                                                               
committee  to do  the job  they were  elected to  do, and  inform                                                               
constituents of the  science presented by the  brilliant minds of                                                               
the Alaska  Criminal Justice  Commission.  It  is a  reckless and                                                               
knee-jerk reaction,  she expressed, to  blame Senate Bill  91 for                                                               
an increase  in crime when  evidence has  shown that the  rise in                                                               
crime began  well before the  enactment of Senate Bill  91, which                                                               
has  yet to  be fully  implemented.   Ms.  Eames listed  possible                                                               
factors in the  rise in crime as follows: Alaska  is in the worst                                                               
recession  it has  seen in  decades; it  is in  the middle  of an                                                               
opioid epidemic; Alaskans  have seen drastic cuts  to the courts,                                                               
prosecutors, and  public safety officers; and  Alaska still needs                                                               
expanded treatment options.   She asked that  when considering SB
54, that  the members of this  committee stay true to  the intent                                                               
of  Senate  Bill 91,  and  refrain  from  making changes  to  the                                                               
criminal justice reform system that are not evidence-based.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
6:53:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHRISTINE FURCY offered testimony as follows:                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
     Hello,  my  name  is  Christine   Furcy.    I  am  from                                                                    
     Ketchikan, Alaska.   I'm  here representing  myself and                                                                    
     so many  others like me.   I  am a person  of long-term                                                                    
     recovery from  a substance use disorder  that robbed me                                                                    
     from  half  of  my  life.    That  same  substance  use                                                                    
     disorder robbed  me of  a sister.   And,  more recently                                                                    
     than not,  it robbed me  of a best  friend.  I  will be                                                                    
     leaving  Juneau on  Saturday  to go  home  and bury  my                                                                    
     lifelong  best  friend  who, from  whatever  irrational                                                                    
     moment in  his last bit  of life, thought  that killing                                                                    
     himself  in  his home  was  a  better alternative  than                                                                    
     going back  to prison.   So, for  that, not only  am I,                                                                    
     like, riddled  with pain, I  am frustrated.  SB  91 has                                                                    
     not had adequate  time to prove what it  is capable of.                                                                    
     And, I can  tell you that -- because I  am -- I've been                                                                    
     to jail  as a result of  my mistakes, and I  deserve to                                                                    
     be held accountable, as is  so many other people.  But,                                                                    
     we  also --  I  want it  to  be known  that  we are  so                                                                    
     capable  of a  beautiful life.   And,  everybody is  so                                                                    
     concerned and  talking about, like, public  safety, and                                                                    
     I'm not saying that that  isn't an issue because it is.                                                                    
     I  love  my state,  I  love  my  town,  but I  also  am                                                                    
     concerned about  people like me.   We have a  chance to                                                                    
     be productive  and help  facilitate public  safety, but                                                                    
     nobody seems to  be worried about -- it's  like you are                                                                    
     dangling a way  out in front of our faces  just to whip                                                                    
     it away without giving us  a chance, without giving the                                                                    
     people that  have supported  these bills  a chance.   I                                                                    
     don't  know.   Honestly, it  is just  heartbreaking and                                                                    
     frustrating,  for one  brief  moment  so many  Alaskans                                                                    
     felt  like   they  were  being  heard   and  like  they                                                                    
     mattered.   People like me,  we matter, we matter.   My                                                                    
     friend that died  because he didn't want to  go back to                                                                    
     prison, mattered.   My  father was in  jail most  of my                                                                    
     life, he  matters.  My  aunt spent 10 years  in prison,                                                                    
     she mattered.  Thank you.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
6:56:33 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JOSE DELEGADE offered testimony as follows:                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     My  name is  Jose Delegade.    The first  thing that  I                                                                    
     would like  to say is,  I'm sorry,  you know for  ... I                                                                    
     had an addiction problem.   I committed a lot of crimes                                                                    
     in Juneau.  I'm serving time  right now for -- an ankle                                                                    
     monitor.  But,  the SB 91, I think they  do need to let                                                                    
     it, you know, let it work.   I believe I was one of the                                                                    
     first  cases that  went out  on SB  91, when  I was  on                                                                    
     sentencing.  You know, I do  believe you need to let it                                                                    
     work.  Right  now, I'm on ankle monitor,  serving ... I                                                                    
     got sentenced  to five-years  in prison.   While  I was                                                                    
     there, you  know, I  found God.   I've been  doing very                                                                    
     good.   But, you know,  when I was  there I had  a wife                                                                    
     and she shot herself.  So,  you know, that and a lot of                                                                    
     other things, you know, they  need -- they need to open                                                                    
     -- they  got one jail  that holds like 300  people, and                                                                    
     they got one  substance abuse place to  hold 28 people.                                                                    
     And,  putting --  I can  tell  you right  now they  are                                                                    
     putting  people in  jail, you  know, people  that never                                                                    
     been  to jail,  you are  putting them  in jail  for the                                                                    
     first time and  you give them time, they  will come out                                                                    
     worse than they will have  ever been when they went in.                                                                    
     So,  I'm telling  you right  now that  jail --  I mean,                                                                    
     jail does not -- does  not do anything but makes people                                                                    
     worse.   I can you  tell you that  right now.   And I'm                                                                    
     also a  veteran, I  served in  the United  States Army.                                                                    
     You know, I just  like to say -- I just  like to say to                                                                    
     let  SB  91 run  through  and  see  what --  you  know,                                                                    
     because it is working in  other places, like Texas, and                                                                    
     places like that.  That's all I got.  Thank you.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KREISS-TOMKINS asked  that Mr.  Delegade describe                                                               
his reentry process  into society and whether  it was facilitated                                                               
or   supported  by   the  Juneau   Reentry  Coalition   or  other                                                               
organizations in  the community,  and the  manner in  which those                                                               
organizations assisted in his reentry.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. DELEGADE  responded that he  was supported by  Second Chance,                                                               
and he  filled out  [job] applications  online at  Second Chance.                                                               
He advised  that he has  worked at his current  job approximately                                                               
eight-months,  and described  that  "I got  a  pretty good  job,"                                                               
because  he is  able  to put  in  a lot  of  overtime, and  earns                                                               
approximately  $6,000 per  month.   Previously, he  explained, he                                                               
was at  the half-way house  and could not  have a phone.   Having                                                               
the availability  of Second Chance  and a  place to fill  out his                                                               
employment applications  was helpful.   Plus, he  stressed, "they                                                               
treated us excellent there, they  didn't treat us like criminals,                                                               
they treated us  like human beings."  He stated  that places such                                                               
as  Second Chance  do  help,  and that  is  how  he received  his                                                               
current job.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KREISS-TOMKINS asked  the name  of his  employer,                                                               
and his duties.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
MR. DELEGADE  answered that  he works  for Inspectorate  - Bureau                                                               
Veritas, and he works in a lab processing core samples.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
7:01:42 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NINA GARRISON offered testimony as follows:                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Hello, and thank  you for your time  and opportunity to                                                                    
     speak.  My  name is Nina Garrison, and I  am from here,                                                                    
     from Juneau.   I am here representing  myself, and also                                                                    
     our people --  our people who are  incarcerated.  Also,                                                                    
     for those  who do not  have a voice that  cannot speak,                                                                    
     that it is  too late, that they are already  gone.  One                                                                    
     reminder, I don't know what  the -- I'm sorry, I didn't                                                                    
     do  research on  the House  bills.   I  just found  out                                                                    
     about this and  just grabbed it out in the  hall, but I                                                                    
     do have  a comment and I  will try to make  it as quick                                                                    
     as possible.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     Miranda is  a young  lady who  shot herself  across the                                                                    
     street, AT  the court building.   And, I did  just meet                                                                    
     her and the  conversation that I had with  her before I                                                                    
     heard  the  news  about her  shooting  herself  --  the                                                                    
     conversation that  her and I  had, beside talkin  -- we                                                                    
     always talk  about the  Lord.  I  never leave  the Lord                                                                    
     out  in  anything.   She  was  pleading for  help,  for                                                                    
     treatment, and  she was addicted  to meth,  and heroin,                                                                    
     and there's other  substances we all know,  it's in the                                                                    
     communities and in villages.   And, it's a crying right                                                                    
     now  from all  the  people that  we've lost,  committed                                                                    
     suicide, or homelessness, or mental  abuse -- mental --                                                                    
     you  know, they  have  problems with  mental --  suffer                                                                    
     from PTSD.   I've  been in  the system  15-years myself                                                                    
     and I've  seen a  lot, and I've  walked in  their shoes                                                                    
     along  beside them.   Most  of  the people  I know  are                                                                    
     passed away because of drugs  and alcohol.  And, what I                                                                    
     want to say is that she  cried for help, she said there                                                                    
     was no  treatment center.   I also had a  daughter that                                                                    
     was  also addicted  to meth  while I  was incarcerated,                                                                    
     when she was  a minor.  And, she also  had mentioned to                                                                    
     me, she is gone now.   But, these voices from the past,                                                                    
     they  all cried  for help,  for treatment,  alcohol and                                                                    
     treatment centers.   That  jail was  not the  place for                                                                    
     them, they really  cry out.  And, it  will -- actually,                                                                    
     what  I wanted  to add  was  the people  that sell  the                                                                    
     drugs and make the drugs  in our communities and in the                                                                    
     villages,  they need  stiffer  penalties.   Down  south                                                                    
     they  get 25-years  for meth,  up here  they get  ... I                                                                    
     don't know how  much, I don't know what it  is.  But, I                                                                    
     think  that we  need  to re-evaluate  and re-visit  all                                                                    
     these pushers --  the ones that actually  bring it into                                                                    
      the communities.  Like, we can't do nothing about it                                                                      
     and we can.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
7:05:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MICHAEL ALBERTSON  said that he represents  fair-minded Alaskans,                                                               
and remarked  that he  is a  strong supporter  of Senate  Bill 91                                                               
because it  is a  long overdue logical  step, and  then described                                                               
himself as a reluctant supporter of  SB 54.  Personally, he said,                                                               
he does  not think  the state  should have  a special  session to                                                               
address SB 54, but there are  good points in the legislation.  He                                                               
offered  concern about  telling an  alcoholic that  they were  in                                                               
violation  of their  conditions of  release by  drinking alcohol,                                                               
(audio difficulties).   In  response to  Representative Eastman's                                                               
previous question  regarding the "three  strikes and you  are out                                                               
rule,"  commented  that  California  did pass  such  a  rule  and                                                               
rescinded  that   rule  because   it  was  swelling   the  prison                                                               
population.   He pointed out  that Texas  has a population  of 22                                                               
million people  and it  put $250 million  into its  programs, and                                                               
Alaska has a population of 750,000  people, with a higher cost of                                                               
living,  and  that  $100  million  is  a  reasonable  start,  and                                                               
expressed  that many  of the  increases in  crime in  Alaska have                                                               
nothing  to  do  with  Senate  Bill 91.    He  then  referred  to                                                               
(indisc.) Anchorage chart,  and advised that in  2016, there were                                                               
683  motor vehicle  theft, and  during 1993  to 1994,  there were                                                               
almost 900  thefts, and that  theft was  escalating in 2017.   He                                                               
said he is not a law  enforcement person, but those figures point                                                               
to a  fairly effective car  theft ring organization,  rather than                                                               
addicts stealing  cars.  Larceny  in Anchorage is the  same issue                                                               
because in the last half of  the 1980s it was almost 5,000, which                                                               
is substantially above today's numbers, he said.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
7:07:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CAROL JANE  ROOK advised that she  is a registered nurse,  an Air                                                               
Force  (indisc.), a  mother,  and she  represents  herself.   She                                                               
asked the  committee to vote no  on SB 54 because  Senate Bill 91                                                               
was implemented in a backwards  manner.  Prisons were emptied out                                                               
without  programs being  in place  which was  supposed to  reduce                                                               
recidivism, and felony sentencing was  reduced on many crimes and                                                               
crime  is  rampant.    Every  day, social  media,  the  news,  or                                                               
neighborhood  watch apps,  are filled  with  reports of  violence                                                               
against   people  and   property  throughout   Alaska,  and   she                                                               
questioned where  the numbers originated  that report  that crime                                                               
has not  increased since the  enactment of  Senate Bill 91.   The                                                               
evidence is clear,  she said, and anyone currently  living in the                                                               
streets in Anchorage know that it  is a violent, violent place to                                                               
live.  She  stressed frustration with the people who  say to wait                                                               
because  the  legislation  had not  yet  been  fully  implemented                                                               
because  people  are  dying,  lives  are  being  devastated,  and                                                               
tourists are not  coming to Alaska because they do  not feel safe                                                               
coming  here.    She  related   that  she  had  attended  several                                                               
community meetings  where the  overwhelming majority  of citizens                                                               
voiced that they want Senate Bill  91 repealed, and a no-vote for                                                               
SB  54.   She described  that the  response from  legislators and                                                               
local  officials  has  been  less  than  inspiring,  with  a  few                                                               
exceptions.  This  hearing was not well advertised,  and she said                                                               
she learned  of it by happenstance.   Senate Bill 54  is supposed                                                               
to  repair  Senate  Bill  91,  but it  falls  woefully  short  as                                                               
written, she commented.  A few  people have offered support for a                                                               
few aspects of it, but no one  has actually read the bill, and it                                                               
will be made  into law with all of the  amendments attached.  She                                                               
said that the state needs  sentencing that deters recidivism, and                                                               
has  support  programs  in  place  for  those  people  reentering                                                               
society.   Although,  she stated,  these things  need to  be well                                                               
thought out  and the monies found  before being put into  a bill,                                                               
and the bill  needs to be put  before the voters.   She asked the                                                               
committee to  listen to  the people,  vote accordingly,  and vote                                                               
like the member's job depends on it, because it does.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
7:10:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
FRANCESSCA ALLEGREZZA advised  that she is opposed to  SB 54, and                                                               
would like  a repeal of Senate  Bill 91 because taxes  should not                                                               
be implemented  to solve crime.   She stated there should  not be                                                               
more  special sessions  for these  types of  things, and  the PFD                                                               
raid must be  stopped.  Alaska has a serious  spending and budget                                                               
problem to  fix, and  she pointed out  that last  winter Governor                                                               
Bill Walker  had advised  the public that  "we could  either have                                                               
their streets  plowed, or  we could  afford more  cops.   I don't                                                               
really think  that is acceptable."   Road safety is  definitely a                                                               
concern in  Alaska and  the streets  need to  be plowed,  and "we                                                               
shouldn't be  levied over by  having cops  to solve crime."   The                                                               
state  is at  cross-roads where  things are  just getting  out of                                                               
control, she described, and she  is totally against SB 54 because                                                               
Senate Bill  91 is  not working  and needs to  be repealed.   She                                                               
said she likes that the public  is able to call into hearings and                                                               
voice its opinions because it is difficult to get to Juneau.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
7:12:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KRIS WILSON said he was speaking  on his own behalf as a two-time                                                               
victim of burglary.  He related  that, if there is no crime, then                                                               
law enforcement  is not necessary,  and by  legalizing everything                                                               
"I guess  there's really no  crime and  you really don't  need to                                                               
fund any  troopers."   He said  that he is  against that  idea as                                                               
someone who  has lost  upwards of  $50,000 worth  of merchandise,                                                               
and  rather than  just slapping  someone on  the wrist  for these                                                               
lesser  crimes,  the  community   could  benefit  from  community                                                               
service sentences  for these  criminals.   He suggested  that for                                                               
every $20 of property value that  is stolen, an hour of community                                                               
service  could be  imposed to  assist the  communities with  soup                                                               
lines and hospitals.  Thereby,  he said, exposing these offenders                                                               
to people with real struggles.   In addressing the opioid crisis,                                                               
he stressed  that "there needs  to be  a doggone good  reason for                                                               
that stuff  to be handed out  in a prescription" and  if it's not                                                               
available, it's not available.   He suggested calling some of the                                                               
scientists   and   bio-chemists,   "and   whatnot,"   some   real                                                               
professionals,  in  here  to  provide the  key  to  stopping  the                                                               
manufacture of some of these hard drugs.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR.  WILSON, in  response  to Chair  Claman's question,  answered                                                               
that he does  not support any of  it, he wants hard  laws, and he                                                               
wants people picking up trash in the ditch.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
7:15:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ELIZABETH FLEMING, Attorney, advised that  she is a proud 30-year                                                               
veteran of  the United States Army,  she is an attorney,  and she                                                               
is in  support of Senate  Bill 91 as it  currently stands.    Ms.                                                               
Fleming advised that her heart is  almost breaking at some of the                                                               
testimonies she has heard tonight  about our fellow human beings,                                                               
our  neighbors.   Everyone who  commits a  crime leaves  behind a                                                               
wake of people who are hurt,  such as their mother, their sister,                                                               
their wives, their children, and  not just the "so-called victims                                                               
of the crimes."  She offered that  she was a victim of a burglary                                                               
a year  ago, but the  way that people  tend to overreact  is, "we                                                               
want three strikes  or you're out, we want zero  tolerance."  She                                                               
reminded the  committee that  these are  our fellow  human beings                                                               
and if they  are treated like animals, they  will become animals.                                                               
Ms. Fleming  offered appreciation to the  gentleman who testified                                                               
that, "sending people to jail makes  them worse."  Senate Bill 91                                                               
involved  a lot  of well  researched data,  a lot  of bi-partisan                                                               
effort, and a lot  of work to try to do the  right thing by human                                                               
beings in Alaska.   Many of the complaints she  has heard tonight                                                               
are  just  ill-informed,  and she  knows  they  are  ill-informed                                                               
because she  works in criminal law.   The bail schedule,  and not                                                               
Senate Bill 91,  is the reason people are picked  up at night and                                                               
then are back  on the street.  She explained  that even if Senate                                                               
Bill  was  completely repealed,  it  is  the bail  schedule  that                                                               
caused those events.   She recommended that everyone  spend a few                                                               
minutes, or  a whole day, in  their local courthouses to  see the                                                               
human beings  that are  involved in this  process with  their own                                                               
eyes.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
7:18:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NATASHA  SINGH advised  that she  represents the  Alaska Regional                                                               
Coalition,   a  consortium   of  five   Native  regional   tribal                                                               
nonprofits  that represent  over  100 Native  communities in  the                                                               
state from Kotzebue to Ketchikan.   The Alaska Regional Coalition                                                               
has  been in  support of  criminal justice  reform since  Senator                                                               
John  Coghill began  his research  addressing the  high rates  of                                                               
crime in  Alaska.  She  reminded the  committee that most  of the                                                               
individuals  in jail  are Native,  and they  are mentally  ill or                                                               
substance   abuse  addicts,   and  those   individuals  are   the                                                               
coalition's family  and its tribal  members.  She  explained that                                                               
individuals  who commit  low-level crimes  go into  the jails  as                                                               
addicts,  and they  are released  hard and  ready to  commit high                                                               
level  crimes,  and the  largest  growing  Native communities  in                                                               
Alaska  are located  in Alaskan  jails.   She  remarked that  the                                                               
coalition  met with  the state's  prosecutors and  it understands                                                               
the  need  for SB  54,  and  supports  the legislation,  but  the                                                               
coalition cannot  support further attempts to  roll back criminal                                                               
justice  reform.    Individuals  who   are  addicts  need  to  be                                                               
supported because  they are  human beings, and  this is  not only                                                               
the  right thing  to do,  but it  is fiscally  responsible.   She                                                               
pointed out  that the  individuals who  testified that  the state                                                               
needs to wait  until certain revenue is  available are forgetting                                                               
the  fact that  the costs  of incarceration  are extremely  high.                                                               
Ms. Singh  reminded the committee  that Senator  Coghill proposed                                                               
criminal  justice  reform  not   just  because  it  was  fiscally                                                               
responsible,  but   because  he   is  a   Christian  and   he  is                                                               
compassionate.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
7:20:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CAROL CARMAN said she was speaking  on her own behalf and advised                                                               
that  not much  time passed  for her  between learning  of Senate                                                               
Bill 91,  and its passage.   She was told by  one legislator that                                                               
the  bill  was  all  about  rehabilitation  and,  therefore,  she                                                               
supported  the  legislation  because she  believes  in  community                                                               
reinvestment, rehabilitation,  and human  beings.   In attempting                                                               
to understand Senate Bill 91, she  said she read something on the                                                               
University  of Alaska  Anchorage  web site,  and  "a really  good                                                               
overview" from  the governor's office,  and she was  stunned that                                                               
every consequence for every single  crime had been lessened quite                                                               
a  bit,  except murder.    Currently,  she  noted, she  has  read                                                               
articles  in  the newspaper  stating  that  Alaska has  the  most                                                               
liberal  laws in  the  country due  to Senate  Bill  91, and  she                                                               
questions  whether SB  54  could be  constructed  well enough  to                                                               
rectify that  situation.  Something  must be done, or  the public                                                               
would not  be crying  out in  this manner of  concern.   She then                                                               
referred  to  testimony  regarding  previous  higher  numbers  of                                                               
vehicle thefts compared to current  vehicle thefts, and commented                                                               
that if the  car thieves are not being caught  now, it is because                                                               
law enforcement is busy with  other crimes and vehicle thefts are                                                               
not reported.   She opined that an awful lot  of things are going                                                               
unreported currently,  because law  enforcement just  cannot keep                                                               
up with these crimes.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
7:23:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHERYL KAJBAN advised  that she is a long-time  Alaskan living in                                                               
Palmer,  and  speaking on  her  own  behalf.   Her  concern,  she                                                               
related, is her safety and  also being able to defend individuals                                                               
in her company.  She offered  great concern for her daughter, who                                                               
has  a private  practice in  Anchorage  with a  drug house  right                                                               
across the street, and for  her grandchildren going to school and                                                               
coming home.   She said she is familiar with  Alaska's history of                                                               
crime   rising  and   lowering,   and   she  supports   effective                                                               
rehabilitation  when  people  want  to  change.    Although,  she                                                               
pointed out, she has not  heard anything about (indisc.), and her                                                               
mother  was killed  by  someone  speaking on  her  cell phone  in                                                               
Minnesota,  "and the  lady got  nothing."   She related  that she                                                               
supports SB 54,  and that there must be some  type of sustainable                                                               
rehabilitation, although,  she is frustrated that  politicians do                                                               
not  listen to  their  constituents.   It is  a  matter of  self-                                                               
survival and self-protection in  this state, she commented, which                                                               
is one of  the state's primary concerns and  objectives, and that                                                               
includes  rehabilitation as  long  as it  does  not endanger  the                                                               
people at large.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
MS. KAJBAN,  in response to  Chair Claman, advised that  she does                                                               
support SB 54.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
7:26:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TARA  BURNS  advised that  she  represents  Community United  for                                                               
Safety and Protection,  and asked that the  committee protect the                                                               
sections  of Senate  Bill 91  that  prevent sex  workers and  sex                                                               
trafficking  victims  from  being charged  with  trafficking  for                                                               
engagement of  prostitution.   Sections of  this bill  propose to                                                               
move AS 11.66.130 and 11.66.135,  which prevents prosecutors from                                                               
charging sex  trafficking if  the person  has not  induced anyone                                                               
into prostitution.   Many  things have been  said about  what sex                                                               
trafficking  is, but  AS 11.66.130  and 11.66.135  only speak  of                                                               
having a place of prostitution,  which can include a prostitute's                                                               
home  and hotel  room, and  aiding or  facilitating prostitution.                                                               
She described  that the language is  so broad that one  woman was                                                               
charged for  sex trafficking herself  for aiding  or facilitating                                                               
her  own  prostitution.    She  said  that  forcing  people  into                                                               
prostitution,  or having  a prostitution  enterprise, or  conduct                                                               
(indisc.)  AS 11.66.110  and 11.66.120  have  no protections  for                                                               
people engaged in prostitution.  In  the event a sex worker finds                                                               
herself in a  location with a victim of sex  trafficking, the sex                                                               
worker  should be  encouraged to  report this  crime rather  than                                                               
hunted down  as a sex trafficker  herself, she pointed out.   Sex                                                               
workers and  clients of sex  workers are first responders  in sex                                                               
trafficking situations, and  the legislature's responsibility for                                                               
public safety  demands that  these people  not face  felonies for                                                               
reporting these  situations to law  enforcement.   She reiterated                                                               
that AS  11.66.130 and  11.66.135 are so  broad that  they define                                                               
many sex  trafficking victims as  sex traffickers.   For example,                                                               
she  advised that  at least  one case  under subsections  in this                                                               
bill  proposes removing  (indisc.).   The victim  of violent  sex                                                               
trafficking was able to make a  report after she was assured that                                                               
she and other  victims would not be charged  for trafficking when                                                               
driving each  other to calls,  taking pictures of each  other, or                                                               
having  hotel  rooms   in  their  names.     She  commented  that                                                               
legislators  have not  heard  of any  cases  where a  perpetrator                                                               
harming someone  could not  be charged with  it because  of these                                                               
[provisions].   Removing these [provisions] puts  sex workers and                                                               
sex trafficking  victims at risk  and pushes  trafficking victims                                                               
further underground.   She asked the members of  the committee to                                                               
please   protect  the   provisions  for   sex  workers   and  sex                                                               
trafficking victims that were introduced in Senate Bill 91.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
7:28:56 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CRYSTAL  GODBY,  Community  United   for  Safety  and  Protection                                                               
(CUSP),  asked  that  the committee  protect  the  provisions  in                                                               
Senate  Bill 91  that  protect sex  workers  and sex  trafficking                                                               
victims  from being  charged with  trafficking  themselves.   She                                                               
advised that  she was  a sex worker  for three-years  because she                                                               
was  a homeless  drug addict,  and  now she  is 22-months  clean.                                                               
When she  was a sex  worker, she pointed  out, it was  well known                                                               
that they could not call the  police if anything went wrong, they                                                               
had  to stick  together,  look  out for  each  other, share  good                                                               
clients, share  hotel rooms, and  give each other rides  to calls                                                               
and wait  outside to be sure  their friends were safe.   When the                                                               
legislature  turned sex  workers safety  measures into  felonies,                                                               
sex workers  felt less safe,  and people  don't want to  look out                                                               
for each other if it means  catching a felony which puts lives in                                                               
danger.   She related  that if  a friend of  hers would  have had                                                               
someone waiting outside for her,  she might still be alive today.                                                               
She commented  that she had  offered her testimony to  the Alaska                                                               
Criminal Justice  Commission and  it surprised her  to see  SB 54                                                               
attacking the safety of sex  workers and sex trafficking victims.                                                               
She  asked that  the  committee protect  the  good provisions  of                                                               
Senate  Bill  91  protecting  sex  workers  and  sex  trafficking                                                               
victims from being charged with trafficking themselves.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
7:30:27 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SEN  TAN advised  that he  is speaking  in his  personal capacity                                                               
regarding the  repeal of Senate Bill  91, and SB 54,  and that it                                                               
has been  a lesson for  him when listening to  these testimonies.                                                               
He thanked the  legislature for crafting and  passing Senate Bill                                                               
91,  as  the previous  system  was  not working  when  discussing                                                               
safety.  Especially,  he explained, where there was  a 66 percent                                                               
recidivism rate with lengthy sentences,  and if lengthy sentences                                                               
worked, that  would mean the  state should  not have such  a high                                                               
recidivism rate.  Not to  mention, the disproportionate impact on                                                               
minorities with  sentencing.   He commented that  he was  sort of                                                               
agnostic about SB  54 because it really  was not a big  item.  He                                                               
advised that his purpose in calling  was to address the fact that                                                               
Senate Bill 91  was an excellent piece of  legislation because it                                                               
was a  policy decision based  on a  lot of information  and data.                                                               
He then commended  the policy makers for taking the  time to look                                                               
at all of the  important facts and then a decision  was made.  He                                                               
recommended that  before legislators begin making  major changes,                                                               
even  minor changes,  that they  look  at actual  facts and  data                                                               
because  tonight  he  heard  a  lot of  opinions  and  a  lot  of                                                               
anecdotal  information.    Make  good policy  decisions  and,  he                                                               
suggested  that  the  legislators  continue  their  good  job  by                                                               
relying  on good  data.    Thereby, he  remarked,  the people  of                                                               
Alaska will be safer and better as a result.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SEN  TAN, in  response  to  Chair Claman,  answered  that he  had                                                               
served 17.5 years as an Anchorage Superior Court Judge.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
7:33:37 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SHERRY MILLER advised  that in no manner does  she support Senate                                                               
Bill 91, and that she was  speaking on behalf of her deceased 19-                                                               
year old  daughter, Linda Bower.   She advised that  her daughter                                                               
was  murdered  by  her  boyfriend,   by  strangulation,  and  her                                                               
daughter was found in the backseat  of her boyfriend's car in the                                                               
parking lot of a local store.  Ms. Miller testified as follows:                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
     Senate  Bill 91  has affected  our family  in the  most                                                                    
     horrific way.   Our case is in appeals as  we asked the                                                                    
     judge to reject  the plea that we agreed  to because of                                                                    
     learning how SB 91 affected  our case.  Even though the                                                                    
     crime happened prior  to the enactment of SB  91.  But,                                                                    
     keep in  mind that  we have not  reached a  sentence in                                                                    
     over  three-years,  one-month.     His  conviction  and                                                                    
     parole time  is affected by SB  91.  Because of  SB 91,                                                                    
     discretionary  parole  is  based  on a  review  of  the                                                                    
     inmate by the Parole Board  after the inmate has served                                                                    
     one-third of their active term  imprisonment.  If he is                                                                    
     denied parole,  this murderer gets an  automatic parole                                                                    
     hearing  every two-years  until  granted.   This  means                                                                    
     that me and  my family have to endure  this monster and                                                                    
     horror of  her murder  every two-years until  parole is                                                                    
     granted.  According to SB  91, for the first-offense of                                                                    
     a parole violation, he only  spends three-days in jail,                                                                    
     second   technical   violation   -   five-days,   third                                                                    
     violation -  ten days.   Violent criminals  are walking                                                                    
     our streets because of our  current crime bill.  How do                                                                    
     you  rehabilitate  a  murderer?   Do  you  get  him  to                                                                    
     promise not to do it again?   Public safety is not your                                                                    
     top  priority  and  Alaskans  are not  safe.    I  have                                                                    
     personally   attended    several   townhall   meetings,                                                                    
     interviewed   with  local   news   media,  and   public                                                                    
     testimony  to the  Anchorage Assembly,  and  I feel  my                                                                    
     testimonies  are  not  take  seriously  or  even  being                                                                    
     heard.   Please consider  this personal  testimony, and                                                                    
     keep in  mind that victims  these criminals --  keep in                                                                    
     mind that  victims of  these crimes  are also  the ones                                                                    
     who vote.  Thank you for your time.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
7:35:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE EASTMAN  noted her  testimony of her  family going                                                               
through parole  hearings every two-years,  and asked how  she has                                                               
worked out the timing every two-years.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS.  MILLER responded  that  if the  offender  is convicted,  the                                                               
offender must  serve one-third of that  sentence.  Theoretically,                                                               
she explained, the  offender could be eligible for  parole at 14-                                                               
years,  and if  he  is  denied parole  then  he is  automatically                                                               
granted  a  parole  hearing  every   two-years  until  parole  is                                                               
granted, due to Senate Bill 91.  She then said, "Page 85."                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE EASTMAN asked how  long the parole hearing process                                                               
would impact her  family each time the parole  hearing would take                                                               
place.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MS. MILLER commented,  "It's up to how long  that hearing takes."                                                               
She then  asked that  Representative Eastman  put himself  in her                                                               
family's  shoes because  the offender  should not  even be  given                                                               
parole.   This  is a  person who  walked the  public streets  and                                                               
committed  this crime  to her  daughter, and  there should  be no                                                               
parole, she stated.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
7:37:36 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MELINDA GANT advised that she  had supported Senate Bill 91 until                                                               
she  experienced  the  negative changes  happening  in  Anchorage                                                               
during this  last year.  She  said she would support  a repeal of                                                               
Senate Bill 91,  and described SB 54 is a  band-aid approach that                                                               
does not address  the lack of financial  commitment for treatment                                                               
services to make either of these  two bills successful.  She said                                                               
she  would support  a full  repeal of  Senate Bill  91 until  the                                                               
legislative body  commits funding for the  necessary services and                                                               
reinstates  funding for  [the  Department of  Law  (DOL)].   Once                                                               
these services are in place,  and the prosecutor positions in DOL                                                               
are fully staffed,  she would then support the  concept of either                                                               
Senate Bill 91 or SB 54.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
7:38:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
EDITH GRUNWALD advised  that she is speaking for  her family, and                                                               
noted support  for SB  54 because it  addresses some  "tiny gaps,                                                               
but to  please make it tougher  on crime, and repeal  Senate Bill                                                               
91.  Currently, crime is  terrible and while visiting courtrooms,                                                               
she  sits with  the victims  of  murders, and  their stories  are                                                               
heart wrenching.   There  must be  consequences, even  for lower-                                                               
level crimes, to prevent crime  from escalating because criminals                                                               
do  escalate  their  crimes  and there  must  be  punishment  for                                                               
criminal activity.   She asked that  legislators please represent                                                               
the  people and  make public  safety  a priority.   Ms.  Grunwald                                                               
testified as follows:                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     We  had a  crime problem  before  SB 91,  two of  those                                                                    
     charged  in  my  son's  murder  --  My  son  was  David                                                                    
     Grunwald  who was  murdered on  November  13th, he  was                                                                    
     missing  for 19-days.   And,  they  found him  December                                                                    
     2nd, he  had been tortured, kidnapped,  murdered.  And,                                                                    
     those who were  charged are in jail  right now waiting,                                                                    
     you know,  going through the pretrial,  and everything.                                                                    
     But,  two  of  them  had no  consequences  in  previous                                                                    
     criminal acts.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
     Again,  this  is  before  SB 91.    So,  for  potential                                                                    
     criminals this is  the big thing they  hear.  Potential                                                                    
     criminals must  believe that  they'll get  caught cause                                                                    
     these guys  did not think  that they would  get caught.                                                                    
     They  -- They  voiced this.   So,  please improve  your                                                                    
     recruiting and retention in the Alaska State Troopers.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
     Thank you,  and thank you  to those who  represent your                                                                    
     constituents and  realize that  your actions  do affect                                                                    
     all Alaskans.  I ask you to  be tough, and I ask you to                                                                    
     have courage.   And, I think  that SB 91 may  have been                                                                    
     well-intentioned.   I am not  ill-informed.  I  am well                                                                    
     informed.   I'm a 31-year  veteran, I have  been living                                                                    
     in Alaska for  32 years from North  Pole, to Anchorage,                                                                    
     to the Mat-Su.  And, I appreciate everyone.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
7:41:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE LEDOUX advised Chair Claman that she would like                                                                  
to offer her condolences, and tell her, "I am so sorry for her                                                                  
loss."                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  EASTMAN  noted her  comment  that  there were  no                                                               
consequences  for the  perpetrators against  her son  in previous                                                               
crimes, and  asked why, and whether  it would be fixed  under the                                                               
current version of SB 54.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. GRUNWALD answered as follows:                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
     No, it  absolutely would  not be fixed  by SB  54, this                                                                    
     was a problem  even before SB 91.  There  were -- there                                                                    
     was a kidnapping, an assault,  and a robbery.  And, the                                                                    
     one  guy who  was of  age, he  got away  with an  ankle                                                                    
     bracelet.    And, of  course,  that  same month  before                                                                    
     that,  little  did  they  know  that  he  had  murdered                                                                    
     Frankie Woodford.  After,  when they were investigating                                                                    
     my  son's case,  they  ended up  in that  investigation                                                                    
     finding  some of  the evidence  that they  found in  my                                                                    
     son's  case.    The  two  guys  who  were  with  Damian                                                                    
     Peterson were  involved in  that criminal  activity and                                                                    
     nothing happened  to them for  whatever reasons,  and I                                                                    
     really can't explain that.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
7:42:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TOM BRAUND  advised that he  was deeply involved in  the criminal                                                               
justice   field,   he   has  a   degree   in   criminal   justice                                                               
administration, a minor  in law enforcement, and he  was a police                                                               
officer in San Diego, California,  and portions of Senate Bill 91                                                               
are probably  good.  He  said, "The criminal justice  system tell                                                               
us  that  the surest  deterrent  to  crime  is the  certainty  of                                                               
punishment.   Except, felony crimes  against persons,  even long-                                                               
term  imprisonment doesn't  work.   That  must  include rape  and                                                               
child  molest because  those  are  crimes of  violence  due to  a                                                               
sexual  preference and  are violent,  and  nobody's gonna  change                                                               
these guy's  minds."  He  offered that  20 percent of  the people                                                               
commit  80  percent of  the  crimes,  and after  researching  why                                                               
crooks  do what  they  do,  he concluded  that  they are  utterly                                                               
selfish,  they do  not care  about  the public,  they care  about                                                               
themselves.   He  related that  95-98 percent  of all  crimes are                                                               
directly  attributable  to drugs  and  narcotics  and that  is  a                                                               
little higher than what the  statistics say because, "as a street                                                               
cop,  we  believe it."    With  the  exception, he  pointed  out,                                                               
marijuana is not a  drug, it is an herb.   Senate Bill 91 reduces                                                               
punishment which reduces the crook's  cost of doing business, and                                                               
the legislation  increases costs  to the public  in at  least the                                                               
following four ways: it increases  the cost of fighting crime; it                                                               
increases sellers cost to make  up losses; it increases insurance                                                               
costs; and it  increases replacement property items.   He said he                                                               
would like  to repeal Senate Bill  91, and rethink SB  54 in view                                                               
of  the above-mentioned  points.   He  related that  in order  to                                                               
reduce  costs,  the  legislature   must  prevent  the  criminal's                                                               
opportunities to steal,  and do not let the bad  guys get back on                                                               
the street whenever possible.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
7:45:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  EASTMAN  asked  Mr.   Braund  to  share  the  six                                                               
recommendations he was about to offer when his time ran out.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MR. BRAUND responded  as follows: hold the line on  drugs, but do                                                               
it differently  because many  addicts are  simply self-medicating                                                               
because they have problems and then  they get hooked on drugs and                                                               
do not  know how  to get off  of the drugs;  help those  who help                                                               
addicted individuals  change their  minds, such as  the Fallen-up                                                               
Ministries  in Wasilla;  many  individuals self-medicate  because                                                               
the  medical community  cannot help  them yet,  but doctors  try;                                                               
bring  Alaska an  amount similar  to another  PFD; enact  a three                                                               
strikes law; build more prisons; and enact the death penalty.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
7:46:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MILLETT asked Mr.  Braund to explain his testimony                                                               
regarding the increased costs, such  as insurance and replacement                                                               
costs.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
MR. BRAUND  explained that  when items  are stolen,  it increases                                                               
the costs of fighting crime;  it increases the seller's costs and                                                               
the seller  will make up their  losses when the public  buys more                                                               
stuff;  it  increases  insurance  costs;  and  it  increases  the                                                               
property owner's replacement costs.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
7:47:29 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JAMES CHRISTIE, Attorney,  advised that his family  has long ties                                                               
to Alaska and the criminal  justice system, and he explained that                                                               
his  grandfather was  a law  enforcement officer  in Juneau,  his                                                               
father was a district attorney in  Anchorage in the 1960s, and he                                                               
has been a  practicing criminal defense lawyer for  13-years.  He                                                               
offered strong  support for  Senate Bill  91, and  strongly urged                                                               
this body  to keep  in mind  why Senate Bill  91 was  passed with                                                               
bipartisan  support and  the  support of  the  Department of  Law                                                               
(DOL).   Senate  Bill 91  passed due  to the  fact that  Alaska's                                                               
system of retributive justice failed  to prevent crime, failed to                                                               
prevent  recidivism, and  failed  to  be a  good  steward of  the                                                               
state's limited resources by investing  in a system that paid few                                                               
dividends, he explained.  The  reality is that certain provisions                                                               
of Senate  Bill 91 have  not fully  taken effect, and  he pointed                                                               
out  that treating  Senate Bill  91 as  the cause  of the  crimes                                                               
being  seen  in  Anchorage  absolutely ignores  the  effect  that                                                               
heroin and opioids have had on  this state and the United States.                                                               
The  fact  is, he  said,  crime  has  increased across  both  the                                                               
country  and across  Alaska in  lockstep with  the growth  of the                                                               
opioid crisis.  While Senate Bill  91 may be a convenient target,                                                               
that piece of legislation cannot be  blamed for a crime wave that                                                               
appeared  across the  nation and  began prior  to the  passage of                                                               
Senate  Bill 91.   He  stressed that  Senate Bill  91 is  not the                                                               
cause  of the  crime wave  seen in  Alaska because  the cause  is                                                               
opiates and  heroin.  At this  time, more than any  other time in                                                               
Alaska,  the  legislature must  forge  a  new path  forward  that                                                               
reduces  crime,  reduces  recidivism, and  actually  invests  the                                                               
state's  limited resources  wisely.   He urged  the committee  to                                                               
stay  the course  on Senate  Bill 91,  and he  stressed that  the                                                               
first  concern of  this  body  must be  to  pass a  comprehensive                                                               
budget.   He asked the committee  to allow time for  this program                                                               
to work.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
7:50:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MILLETT acknowledged  that she  agrees completely                                                               
with  Mr. Christie's  comments about  the  state's financial  and                                                               
opioid crisis.   She pointed  out that  timing has been  an issue                                                               
she struggles with  as to Senate Bill 91,  and the implementation                                                               
of  phase one.   She  asked  Mr. Christie  to comment  as to  the                                                               
timing of  the passage of Senate  Bill 91, and whether  phase one                                                               
should have been implemented subsequent  to phases two and three,                                                               
and  whether  combating  the  opioid  crisis  should  have  taken                                                               
precedence.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR. CHRISTIE  commented that  hindsight is  always 20/20,  and he                                                               
certainly  would not  criticize  the legislature  for having  the                                                               
courage  to  pass  Senate  Bill  91  in  the  first  place.    He                                                               
acknowledged  his   inclination  to   agree  with  some   of  the                                                               
testimonies  regarding slight  tweaks  that could  take place  in                                                               
Senate  Bill  91.   He  then  asked that  Representative  Millett                                                               
clarify her question about timing,  and whether she was asking if                                                               
he had  personally observed  an uptick in  crime prior  to Senate                                                               
Bill 91.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MILLETT described  that the  state had  a perfect                                                               
storm take  place with  the uptick in  crime, the  opioid crisis,                                                               
the financial  crisis, the state  being in a recession,  and then                                                               
the legislature laid  top of that, criminal justice  reform.  The                                                               
public is  looking for  something to blame,  and the  easy target                                                               
might be  phase one of Senate  Bill 91 because that  is where all                                                               
the reduction in sentencing started.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR. CHRISTIE expressed that he  strongly agrees with her comment,                                                               
and acknowledged  that over the last  18 months he has  heard "so                                                               
much  misinformation"  about Senate  Bill  91.   He  offered  his                                                               
belief that  the pressures that  face Alaskans in terms  of crime                                                               
are  the result  of  external  factors, and  that  the influx  of                                                               
opiates has  been the biggest  change in his observations  of the                                                               
criminal justice  system in his  career.  He explained  that when                                                               
he first  started practicing criminal  defense, the state  was at                                                               
the  end  of  the  cocaine  and crack  epidemic  and  it  quickly                                                               
transformed  into  methamphetamine.     Crack  was  terrible,  he                                                               
described,  and  methamphetamines  were  worse,  but  heroin  and                                                               
opiates are  an order  of magnitude worse.   People's  ability to                                                               
get  off   of  these  drugs   without  serious   intervention  is                                                               
practically  nil,  and the  reality  is  that simply  warehousing                                                               
people in  jail who are  largely addicts, and  largely committing                                                               
crimes to fuel  their addiction, does not  accomplish anything in                                                               
the long  term.  He advised  that he speaks with  his clients who                                                               
are  oftentimes, unfortunately,  sentenced to  prison terms,  and                                                               
his clients have commented that  the prisons in Alaska are filled                                                               
with drugs.  Therefore, he  pointed out, sending people to prison                                                               
does not  get them  away from  drugs, it does  not get  them away                                                               
from bad  influences, and  he absolutely  supports Representative                                                               
Millett's comment.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MILLETT  referred   to  his  statement  regarding                                                               
tweaks  that could  be added  to SB  54, and  asked that  he send                                                               
those  tweaks  to Chair  Claman's  office  to distribute  to  the                                                               
members on the committee.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MR. CHRISTIE said  he would forward his  recommendations to Chair                                                               
Claman's office.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
7:53:54 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  CLAMAN referred  to the  timing  of phases  one, two,  and                                                               
three, and  asked whether there was  any way in which  to achieve                                                               
the savings that  would result in reinvestment  for various parts                                                               
of Senate Bill 91, had  the legislature not implemented phase one                                                               
at the beginning  of the implementation of Senate  Bill 91, given                                                               
the state's budget challenges.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
MR.  CHRISTIE  responded  that  he  was  unsure  whether  he  was                                                               
qualified  to answer  that question  because he  has not  given a                                                               
great deal  of thought to  that issue.   He pointed out  that the                                                               
only  crisis  he  sees  facing  the  state  budget-wise,  is  the                                                               
legislature's failure to  pass a budget, but that is  a topic for                                                               
another time.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
7:54:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
AMANDA HARBER  advised that  she and  her husband  support Senate                                                               
Bill 91, and  they do not want it repealed.   She explained their                                                               
belief that  Senate Bill  91 was  carefully researched,  and they                                                               
find  it troubling  to hear  so much  misinformation with  Senate                                                               
Bill  91 being  blamed  for so  much pain.    She expressed  that                                                               
Senate Bill  91 is a  step in  the right direction  in addressing                                                               
the real crisis of addiction and  the cycle of trauma it creates.                                                               
The efforts of  the state need to turn to  supporting and funding                                                               
those who  help our fellow  human beings by saving  lives, saving                                                               
families,  and  those   who  provide  treatment,  rehabilitation,                                                               
counseling, and  therapy.  Putting  people in jail does  not save                                                               
lives  and families,  and  she stressed  that  compassion is  the                                                               
right path for Alaskans.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
7:55:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
STEVE  ST. CLAIR  advised that  he is  representing himself  as a                                                               
retired military  policeman with  more than 20  years' experience                                                               
in  law enforcement  and corrections.   He  pointed out  that the                                                               
increase  in  crime  can  be   directly  attributed  to  economic                                                               
conditions and  deterrents, and  it is  well documented  that the                                                               
State of Alaska is in a  recession which is a contributing factor                                                               
to the  increase of criminal  activity.  He  said that SB  54 and                                                               
Senate Bill  91 have had  significant impacts on  deterrents, and                                                               
that almost  all crimes, minus  murder and other  heinous crimes,                                                               
have been reduced.   The intent of  SB 54 and Senate  Bill 91 was                                                               
to  decrease  fiscal costs  by  decreasing  the number  of  those                                                               
incarcerated, and  this has been  accomplished at the  expense of                                                               
public  safety.   While  serving  on  the Juvenile  Review  Board                                                               
(JRB),  comprised of  law enforcement,  mental health  officials,                                                               
and educators,  the board reviewed  cases of  juvenile misconduct                                                               
in an effort to determine  the root cause of juveniles' behavior.                                                               
He remarked  that nine  times out of  ten, juveniles  would state                                                               
that they did  not feel they would get into  trouble, or that the                                                               
punishment was so lenient it was  worth the risk, which is one of                                                               
the  causes of  Alaska's uptick  in crime.   He  suggested voting                                                               
down  SB  54  because  the  changes  are  too  small  to  make  a                                                               
significant  reduction  in  crime,  and  then  begin  the  repeal                                                               
process   of  Senate   Bill  91   for  public   safety  purposes.                                                               
Subsequent  to  Senate  Bill 91  being  repealed,  draft  several                                                               
pieces of legislation that is  more compartmentalized to specific                                                               
crimes  and  punishment,  without   another  omnibus  bill.    He                                                               
suggested seeking out those who  enforce the laws, and those with                                                               
their  boots on  the ground,  because that  leadership tactic  is                                                               
effective.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
7:58:06 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ABBY  ST.  CLAIR  advised  that   a  2011  U.S.A.  Today  article                                                             
regarding the  nation's most dangerous  states, listed  Alaska in                                                               
third  place   because  79.7  residents  out   of  every  100,000                                                               
residents are raped, the nation's  highest in 2011.  According to                                                               
the FBI Uniform  Crime Report, Alaska's rape  rate skyrocketed in                                                               
2016 to 102 residents out  of every 100,000 residents, which only                                                               
accounts for those  cases that were reported.   The media station                                                               
KTUU  quoted the  FBI  crime in  Alaska to  read:  one murder  is                                                               
conducted  every  week, one  arson  every  two-days, one  robbery                                                               
every 10-hours,  one rape  every eight  hours, one  vehicle theft                                                               
every  three-hours,  (audio  difficulties) every  two-hours,  one                                                               
burglary every two-hours, and one  larceny every 29-minutes.  She                                                               
reiterated  previous   testimonies  regarding   the  contributing                                                               
factors in  the uptick in  crimes as follows:  the state is  in a                                                               
recession; unemployment  rates are  at a high;  drug usage  is on                                                               
the rise;  and law  enforcement positions  are unfilled.   During                                                               
the  hearing  on  the  floor  of  the  House  of  Representatives                                                               
yesterday, she noted that the  focus was on the prison population                                                               
and  reducing recidivism.    She asked  what  happened to  public                                                               
safety.   Last year,  she said,  U.S. News  ranked Alaska  as the                                                             
49th  out of  50  states  regarding the  best  states for  public                                                               
safety.  She asked whether  the legislature expects Alaska to hit                                                               
rock  bottom before  doing  anything about  public  safety.   She                                                               
urged the committee  to put public safety back to  the top of the                                                               
list of  priorities, and commented that,  "you've certainly taken                                                               
enough from  Alaskans to  make this happen."   She  further urged                                                               
the committee  to vote no on  SB 54 and begin  the repeal process                                                               
of Senate Bill  91 because there are too many  mistakes in Senate                                                               
Bill 91 that SB 54 cannot fix.   Alaska must be tough on crime to                                                               
take back the state, she remarked.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
8:00:15 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
RAYMOND O'NEILL  advised that  he lives  in a  secure condominium                                                               
building  in downtown  Anchorage, and  offered the  following: in                                                               
July  2016 his  car  was  stolen; in  July  2017 the  condominium                                                               
building was broken into and  his bicycle was stolen, and several                                                               
other tenants  were burglarized; and  in August 2017  the Midtown                                                               
office  building he  works in  was  burglarized and  a couple  of                                                               
laptops and  the company  vehicle was  stolen.   Nevertheless, he                                                               
said, he  attended a townhall meeting  last week and a  couple of                                                               
the  researchers who  put the  bill  together, with  the idea  of                                                               
reducing  recidivism and  encouraging  rehabilitation, offered  a                                                               
presentation  and it  was apparent  that Senate  Bill 91  had not                                                               
been given its full term.   He pointed out that funding will come                                                               
into place  to help  fund rehabilitation,  and he  encouraged the                                                               
committee to  not repeal Senate Bill  91.  He stressed  that even                                                               
given  the  amount of  crime  he  has  experienced, he  does  not                                                               
believe putting  people in jail  is helpful because  jail creates                                                               
criminals.  Mr. O'Neill reminded  the committee that this country                                                               
is about locking people up, and  commented that prisons are a big                                                               
industry  with  a  lot  of  money to  be  made,  and  he  becomes                                                               
suspicious  when  the legislature  gets  so  heated and  acts  so                                                               
quickly in this climate of industry-driven legislation.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
8:02:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CATHLEEN   McLAUGHLIN,  Director,   Partner's  Re-Entry   Center,                                                               
advised  she  is speaking  on  her  own  behalf.   She  described                                                               
herself  as  lucky because  she  has  been  the Director  of  the                                                               
Partner's Re-Entry Center  for the past four-years,  and with her                                                               
boots on  the ground  has seen  the benefits  of Senate  Bill 91.                                                               
Oftentimes, she pointed  out, people want a home run  and want to                                                               
swing for  the fences,  and all  of a  sudden everything  will be                                                               
perfect.   She  described that  criminal justice  reform is  like                                                               
playing small  ball baseball, it  will take  some time to  get to                                                               
what the  public wants, which is  to win the game,  but that will                                                               
not happen  overnight.   The Partner's  Re-Entry Center  has been                                                               
around and  has been  a beneficiary  of what  Senate Bill  91 has                                                               
done, and  what SB 54 will  continue to do by  correcting some of                                                               
the things that needed to be  corrected, she said.  Due to Senate                                                               
Bill  91, she  advised, the  Partner's Re-Entry  Center has  been                                                               
able  to do  the  following: get  people  applying for  Medicaid;                                                               
obtain immediate or very quick  medical services; put people into                                                               
medically assisted  treatment; it started a  Vivitrol program; it                                                               
started  a Alaska  Native Re-Entry  Group program  that advocates                                                               
for  Alaska  Natives  that are  over-represented  in  the  prison                                                               
system;  and  the Center  has  used  a  few amounts  of  criminal                                                               
justice  reinvestment   to  enhance  housing  for   people  being                                                               
released from prison after long,  long, sentences.  The Partner's                                                               
Re-Entry Center  knows that  community-based re-entry  does work,                                                               
and she  suggested, "let's look  for the  long haul of  trying to                                                               
enhance the project and not just throw it away at this point."                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
8:05:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
NORIA CLARK advised that she  is representing herself as an angry                                                               
citizen because Senate  Bill 91 was passed under  the fa?ade that                                                               
it would save money.  She  expressed that the state is now facing                                                               
a  crime  epidemic  thanks  to  the  legislature's  failures  and                                                               
forcing productive members  of society into a  state of emergency                                                               
by allowing  these degenerates to  run rampant on  public streets                                                               
terrorizing  citizens.   She said  that Senate  Bill 91  promised                                                               
treatment programs with  the saved $300 million,  and asked where                                                               
are the  treatment programs.   Currently,  under Senate  Bill 91,                                                               
possession  of  any   amount  of  drugs,  such   as  heroin,  are                                                               
considered a  Class A misdemeanor,  (audio difficulties)  can you                                                               
have a  pound of heroin  in a stolen vehicle.   In the  event the                                                               
offender  says that  they did  not know  the vehicle  was stolen,                                                               
(audio  difficulties)  massive  amounts  of heroin  on  hand  for                                                               
personal  use.   Also, she  said, even  if the  person was  to be                                                               
arrested for intent to sell, which is  a Class C felony, if it is                                                               
their first  offense and they  are convicted, they receive  up to                                                               
one and  one-half years suspended imprisonment.   Therefore, they                                                               
are free on the streets again  without any time served for any of                                                               
these offenses.  The problem  with repeat offenders, she said, is                                                               
that  no  one  is  being   arrested,  prosecuted,  and  convicted                                                               
currently, and  commented that "They  will effectively  always be                                                               
first-time offenders,  will they not?"   She described  that this                                                               
is the  epitome of  a dog  chasing its  tail, and  SB 54  will be                                                               
equivalent  to putting  a  band-aid  on a  leg  amputation.   She                                                               
advised  that she  is  from  Arizona, and  Arizona  has a  "three                                                               
strikes and  you're out" law,  especially for felonies,  but they                                                               
have  to   be  convicted  first.     She  pointed  to   page  10,                                                               
Practitioner  Guide  to  Senate  Bill  91,  and  said  there  are                                                               
egregious  amounts  of waste  when  it  comes to  not  convicting                                                               
anyone and being consistently perpetrated  against.  She stressed                                                               
that imposing  an income tax  during a recession is  "classic mob                                                               
style tactics, we're payin it for  your protection."  It is not a                                                               
good idea  and, hopefully,  in the  next election,  the committee                                                               
members can be  re-elected if they can help to  figure out how to                                                               
handle this issue.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
8:08:12 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TAMMY DUFF advised that she was  speaking for her family and said                                                               
that  she  no  longer  feels  safe walking  in  Anchorage.    Her                                                               
neighborhood  has   been  hard  hit  with   random  break-ins  to                                                               
vehicles, damage  to properties,  cars stolen,  and she  said she                                                               
found items  tossed into  her yard that  belong to  her neighbors                                                               
from their stolen vehicles.   The crime level impacts businesses,                                                               
such  as grocery  stores that  are hit  hard by  thefts and  that                                                               
causes prices to  rise, and Alaskans already pay a  high rate for                                                               
everyday items.  She advised that  she had personally seen a drug                                                               
deal take  place at the  local post  office, and the  post office                                                               
clerk did  not seem  to care  to get  involved.   Several people,                                                               
including   herself,   avoid   going  downtown   because   thefts                                                               
continuously occur,  such that  last week  while a  colleague was                                                               
discussing her car  being broken into with a policeman,  a car on                                                               
a  lower  level was  broken  into.    This is  unacceptable,  she                                                               
described, and Senate  Bill 91 needs to be  totally repealed, and                                                               
voters need  to be  offered a  voice to choose  how to  deal with                                                               
these criminals.   She  asked that this  bill be  repealed before                                                               
society  turns  more  violent, which  research  has  shown  shows                                                               
happen as criminals become more  confident.  Alaskans are relying                                                               
on  the legislature  to make  the  right choice  for law  abiding                                                               
citizens, and  she is  against Senate  Bill 91, and  SB 54.   She                                                               
advised the committee  members to not implement an  income tax to                                                               
fix this problem  because hardworking Alaskans, who  vote, do not                                                               
need  to  be more  burdened.    Alaskans  are worried  for  their                                                               
safety,  and  she  asked  that   legislators  ensure  that  their                                                               
constituents are safe.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
8:10:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
RHONDA PITKA, Chief of the Village  of Beaver, advised that it is                                                               
too  early to  determine the  cause of  the increase  in Alaska's                                                               
crime rates in relation to Senate  Bill 91.  She pointed out that                                                               
crime rates  have been  on the rise  for decades,  violent crimes                                                               
rates have  increased since 1986,  and property crimes  have been                                                               
increasing since 2011.  Many of  the provisions in Senate Bill 91                                                               
show potential and  the legislation needs time  to be implemented                                                               
before being evaluated, but the  legislature needs to work toward                                                               
a budget  and fully  funding the  Department of  Law (DOL).   She                                                               
stressed  that she  lives  in  a rural  area  of  Alaska and  the                                                               
Village  Public  Safety Officer  (VPSO)  services  have been  cut                                                               
considerably  in the  last few  years, which  has impacted  rural                                                               
areas  more  than  Senate  Bill  91.   There  have  been  several                                                               
instances where it  has taken days for the  Alaska State Troopers                                                               
to get  to the rural area  villages, and that fact  impacts rural                                                               
Alaskans more  than Senate Bill 91.   She asked the  committee to                                                               
fully  fund the  Department  of Corrections  (DOC)  and the  VPSO                                                               
programs.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
8:12:23 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LEONARD MARTIN offered testimony as follows:                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
     Hello.    My  name   is  Leonard  Martin.     I  am  in                                                                    
     Anchorage,   Alaska  and  I  represent   myself  and  I                                                                    
     also  speak on  behalf  of my  cousin,  Gregory Martin                                                                     
     Skill,  who cannot  speak because  he  was murdered  on                                                                    
     September  10,  by  a  drug  abuser  who  has repeated                                                                     
     interactions   with  the   law,  but  has  yet   to  be                                                                    
     convicted,  from  what I understand,  on  any of  these                                                                    
     crimes.    In that  timeframe,  this  person's   crimes                                                                    
     escalated   to  what  I  consider   to  be  a  capital                                                                     
     offense   in   short   order   before   he   could   be                                                                    
     convicted  of any  crime on  any type  of a first-time                                                                     
     offense.   Some  of the problems  with  SB 91 are  that                                                                    
     it   addresses   first-time   offenses   for  specific                                                                     
     crimes.   That being  that  you could  be convicted  as                                                                    
     a  first-time  offender  for  a  DWI, but  now  if  you                                                                    
     commit  a further  crime,  say  for a  drug conviction                                                                     
     or  a   drug  crime,   that  is  still   a  first-time                                                                     
     offense.   All  of  these crimes  as  a whole  need  to                                                                    
     be  combined  together  to prove  a  pattern  within  a                                                                    
     criminal.     The  laws  are  too  soft,   SB  91  does                                                                    
     nothing  to  address  these.   It  speaks only  to  the                                                                    
     criminals  and  treatment  of them.   Prisons  need  to                                                                    
     be a  deterrent,  a very long  deterrent,  that is  the                                                                    
     only  way that  people  are  going  to recognize   that                                                                    
     there  is  a  --  a  consequence   to  their  actions.                                                                     
     Their  actions also  translate  to their  families.   I                                                                    
     heard  many  testimonies  here  about  the  effects  of                                                                    
     people   whose  parents   were   in  prison   as   drug                                                                    
     addicts,   they  were  alcoholics,   and  now  they're                                                                     
     themselves  drug  addicts and  alcoholics.   There's  a                                                                    
     pattern  here.   It  grows  in our  small  communities                                                                     
     and  it continues  to  grow.   These are  the problems                                                                     
     that  we need help  with.   It's not  the prison's  job                                                                    
     to  do that.    I think  we  should  help  people  when                                                                    
     they  are  in prison,  but  we  also  need  to protect                                                                     
     the  public first.   I  don't support  SB  91, I  think                                                                    
     it's  very   broad  and   encompassing,   we  need   to                                                                    
     repeal  it,  we need  to  deal  with  these laws  in  a                                                                    
     much  more  compartmental   fashion.   I  urge  you  to                                                                    
     repeal  SB 91 and  take SB  54 off the  table until  we                                                                    
     can  put  facilities  in  place  to  do the  treatment                                                                     
     and  the  rehabilitation.    You  got the  --  you  got                                                                    
     the  cart ahead  of the  horse on  this,  guys.   Thank                                                                    
     you for your time.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
8:15:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LOI  RICKER  advised  that the  legislature   lost the  trust  of                                                               
Alaska's  hard-working   taxpayers  because  Alaska's  towns  are                                                               
running  rampant  with  crime,   and crime  has  increased   with                                                               
the  passage  of  Senate   Bill  91,  and  SB  54  will  not  fix                                                               
Senate  Bill  91.   (Audio  difficulties)   tonight,  and  taking                                                               
it  all in,  if  a  person  is an  attorney,  or  in  the mental                                                                
health  business,  or a criminal,  "the  deck is  stacked  pretty                                                               
high  on  your  side."    In  reality,  she  said,  the  rest  of                                                               
Alaska   sees  fear   building,   and  that   courts  have   also                                                               
declined.   She  related that  she is  most bothered  by the  $22                                                               
million  spent on  Senate Bill  91, and  that the  state now  has                                                               
a  (indisc.)  system  $18  million   starting  January  1.    She                                                               
related  that  the legislature   implemented  Senate  Bill 91  in                                                               
the  wrong order,  and  asked  "Where  did the  $22  million  go?                                                               
And,  you are  not going  to answer  me,  but I also  would  like                                                               
to know  if this  Senate  Bill 91  and SB  54 are  so great,  why                                                               
are there no public service announcements?"                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
8:17:48 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LINDA  SHARP  advised   that  she  would  like  Senate   Bill  91                                                               
repealed.   Ms.  Sharp relayed  her sympathies   to the families                                                                
who  have  lost  a  loved  one  to  murder  or  a violent   crime                                                               
because  they  are  suffering  from  the  terrible   things  that                                                               
happening  to  their families.    She noted  that she  has  lived                                                               
in  Midtown  Anchorage  for  30  years,  she  has watched   crime                                                               
increase  during  2016  and 2017  by  quite a  bit,  and she  has                                                               
called  911  more  often  than in  previous  years.    She  noted                                                               
that  it appears  Senate  Bill  91 contributed  to  the increase                                                                
in crime,  and  acknowledged  that undoubtedly  the  drug crisis                                                                
throughout  the  nation  is  part  of the  problem.    There  are                                                               
more  people  standing  on  the  streets  begging,   more  street                                                               
corners  loaded  with people  begging,  and  she said  she  would                                                               
like  to see  a state  law  prohibiting  begging  on  the street                                                                
corner.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MS.  SHARP,  in  response  to  Chair  Claman,  advised  that  she                                                               
does not support SB 54.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
8:20:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
DEBORAH   McINTYRE  said  that   she  is  speaking  on   her  own                                                               
behalf  as a life-long  Alaskan,  and  she has watched  crime  go                                                               
up  and down.   She  opined  that like  a  lot of  her neighbors                                                                
and  family members,  she  had no  idea what  was  going on  with                                                               
Senate  Bill  91 until  the  crime  rate began  exploding.    She                                                               
related  that  she has  seen things  taking  place  in Anchorage                                                                
that  she had  never  seen  before  such as,  almost  having  her                                                               
truck  stolen,   and  now  there  are  nightly  watches   in  her                                                               
neighborhood.    Although,   she  acknowledged,  she  is  not  an                                                               
expert  and she  could  not necessarily   contribute  the  events                                                               
to Senate  Bill  91, but  she  does not  trust her  legislators,                                                                
and  emotionally   she  does  not   want  anything  to   do  with                                                               
Senate  Bill 91,  or SB  54.   She asked  the committee  members                                                                
to  please  make   safety  the  priority   because  currently   a                                                               
person  in  an Anchorage   parking  lot  at 10:00  a.m.,  is  not                                                               
necessarily   safe,  and  elders  and  children   are  now  being                                                               
targeted,  and violence  is  escalating.   She advised  that  her                                                               
husband  stopped  a  person  from stealing  his  truck  in  their                                                               
driveway  a year  ago and  she  thought that  was  bad, but  over                                                               
the  past year  it  has only  gotten  worse.   She  stated,  "You                                                               
never  had rehab  at  the  forefront,  my feeling  is  that  this                                                               
is about  saving  money for  our politicians."    She asked  that                                                               
legislators  start  over  and  put  the  safety  of  Alaskans  at                                                               
the  top, "and,  if  you  don't,  I can  tell  you now,  you  are                                                               
all  going to  be  voted out  of office  because  that  is  where                                                               
we're at with this in Anchorage."                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
8:23:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PETE  MLYNARIK,   Chief  of  Police,  advised   that  he  is  the                                                               
Chief  of Police  for Soldatna,  and he  is also  a board  member                                                               
for  the  Alaska  Association   of  Chiefs  of  Police.     Chief                                                               
Mlynarik  related  that he  supports some  of the  changes in  SB
54,  such  as  the  presumptive  range  for  Class  C  felonies,                                                                
active   imprisonment   for  Class  C  felonies,   and  changing                                                                
violations  of  conditions  of  release  from  a violation   back                                                               
to  a  misdemeanor.     He  explained   that  the  three  issues                                                                
adversely   impacting  public   safety  are  as  follows:     the                                                               
fiscal    crisis,    (indisc.),    and   the    bail   schedule.                                                                
Obviously,  the  goal is to  help rehabilitate   people which  is                                                               
not  a short  process,  and  the opiate  crisis  is  serious,  he                                                               
stressed.     Chief  Mlynarik  pointed   to  the  importance   of                                                               
adopting  the  following:   adopt  these  changes   [in  SB  54];                                                               
support  the  Department   of Law  (DOL)  with  more  resources;                                                                
restore  judicial  discretion;  fulfill  the promises  of  Senate                                                               
Bill   91   by   funding   drug   and   alcohol   rehabilitation                                                                
programs;  place  statutory   limitations  on  releasing   repeat                                                               
offenders  on  their own  recognizance  (OR);  restore  the  bail                                                               
schedule;   and  enable  courts   to  "sanction  those   who  pay                                                               
fines and restitution."                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
8:25:39 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   MILLETT  asked   that  Chief  Mlynarik  forward                                                                
his  recommendations  to  Chair  Claman's  office  to distribute                                                                
to the members of the committee.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   KOPP  thanked   Chief  Mlynarik  for   his  long                                                               
service  to the  state  with the  Alaska  State Troopers  and  as                                                               
a  municipal  police  chief.   He  related  that this  committee                                                                
appreciated his thoughtful recommendations.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
8:26:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MORGAN  WHITE,  Attorney,   advised  that  he  was speaking   for                                                               
his  family,  and  as  a  professional  on  the  ground  working                                                                
daily  with public  defenders,  probation  and  parole officers,                                                                
district  attorneys,  judges,  and clerks.   He  related that  he                                                               
sees  the impact  of Senate  Bill  91 daily,  and  stressed  that                                                               
it  would  be  a  bad  idea  to  just  change  course  all  of  a                                                               
sudden,  and  noted  that  SB  54  makes  minor  corrections   to                                                               
many  of the changes.   He  remarked  that previous  testifiers,                                                                
such  as Soldatna  Chief of  Police Pete  Mlynarik,  Director  of                                                               
the  Partner's   Re-Entry   Center   Cathleen   McLaughlin,   and                                                               
criminal   defense   attorney   James   Christie,   are  all   in                                                               
support   of   the   legislation.      The   reason   being,   he                                                               
explained,  is  that  these  people  have  boots  on  the  ground                                                               
and see  what everyone  wants:  more  people accepting  personal                                                                
responsibility;  deterring  other  people  and at  the same  time                                                               
helping  people  address their  use of  the drugs  through  self-                                                               
medication;   helping   the   people   that  are   helping   drug                                                               
addicts;  and  helping people  make  the  good choices  that  can                                                               
help   keep  them   from   victimizing   themselves   and   other                                                               
people.   He  said that  he supports  the  legislators  who  give                                                               
strong  thought  to  the  minor  revisions   to  Senate  Bill  91                                                               
through SB 54.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
8:29:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
VICKI  WALLNER,  Founder,  Stop  Valley  Thieves,   advised  that                                                               
Stop  Valley  Thieves   is  an  organization  with  over   15,000                                                               
members   and  she  speaks  for  a  majority   of  the  members.                                                                
Senate  Bill  54  is a  band-aid  for  "gut-shot"   Alaskans  and                                                               
people  are  crying   out  for  help.    No  rehabilitation   was                                                               
available  for all  of the  people "that  you have  turned  loose                                                               
on us,  and  we are  suffering  those effects."    She commented                                                                
that  the legislature  had  advised that  when enough  money  was                                                               
saved  up, rehabilitation   would  take  place, except  Alaskans                                                                
are  paying   for  it  every   single  day.     The  legislature                                                                
released  people  from  prison  with  no rehabilitation   and  no                                                               
safety   net  for   Alaskans,   even   though  the   public   was                                                               
promised   public  safety.     She  said   that  Dean  Williams,                                                                
[Commissioner   of  the Department   of  Corrections]  testified                                                                
that  11,000 people  have  been  released,  and of  those 11,000                                                                
people,  it   is  expected  that  66  percent   will  recidivate                                                                
within  three   years.    Therefore,   7,000  people  have   been                                                               
released  on  the  street  with  the  state  knowing   they  will                                                               
commit  another  crime.   She  questioned  why legislators   must                                                               
study  the  reasons   Senate  Bill  91  had  problems   with  the                                                               
crime  rate   going  up,  because   it  doesn't  take  a  rocket                                                                
scientist.    There  are  good  parts  to  Senate  Bill  91,  she                                                               
acknowledged,   but  it  needs  to  be  repealed   and  the  good                                                               
parts  put  into  a  different   bill  when  the  state  has  the                                                               
money   to  put  into   rehabilitation   centers.     She   said,                                                               
"You've  basically  given the  citizens  a crime  tax that  we're                                                               
payin  every single  day  in every  way  possible.   And,  people                                                               
are  crying out  to  you folks  to help.    And you're  going  to                                                               
give  them  a  25-page  bill  after  you've  passed  125-pages?"                                                                
She  asked   that  the  committee   put  SB  54  back  into   the                                                               
drawer,  repeal  Senate  Bill  91,  and  pass  legislation   that                                                               
will work.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
8:31:39 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   MILLETT  advised  Ms. Wallner  that  not  enough                                                               
legislators  were  in agreement  to repeal  Senate  Bill 91.   In                                                               
moving  forward   with  SB  54,  she said   she  is looking   for                                                               
constructive   criticism   and   help   crafting   SB  54  in   a                                                               
meaningful  manner,  and  not  just as  a band-aid.    She  asked                                                               
Ms.  Wallner  to  send  any  recommendations   she  may  have  to                                                               
Chair  Claman's  office  to  distribute  to the  members  of  the                                                               
committee.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
MS.  WALLNER  agreed to  forward  her recommendations   to  Chair                                                               
Claman's office.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
8:32:39 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
RUBY  DEE BUCHANON  advised  that  she agrees  with  the perfect                                                                
storm  analysis,   and   that  she  appreciates   the  time   and                                                               
effort  that   went  into  crafting   Senate  Bill  91   to  make                                                               
Alaska  a better  place to  live.  Although,  she  commented,  in                                                               
a perfect  storm  it  is our  responsibility   not to  walk  into                                                               
the middle  of a  lake and  hold an umbrella,  which  is what  is                                                               
happening  when  leaving Senate  Bill  91 in place  and crafting                                                                
SB  54 as  a  band-aid.   Rehabilitation   has  not  been  funded                                                               
for  Senate  Bill  91  because   the state   does  not  have  the                                                               
money,  and the  legislation  was passed  before  the public  had                                                               
knowledge  of  the current  opioid  crisis,  so it  doesn't  even                                                               
address  that crisis.    She related  that  she had  read SB  54,                                                               
Versions   A,  B,  and  C,   and  she  believes   Version   C  is                                                               
currently  the  best because  the  finance  committee  put a  lot                                                               
of  thought   into   that  version.     Except,   she  remarked,                                                                
Version  C does  not  go far  enough  to correct  the  errors  in                                                               
Senate  Bill  91  and  neither  bill  addresses   Alaska  as  the                                                               
crime  destination   it  has  become.    She  said  she  has  two                                                               
friends  in  San  Diego  who  are retired  police   officers  and                                                               
harbor  patrol,  who  worked  against   the "Bloods   and  Crips"                                                               
and  arrest people  for  felony  crimes.   They advised  that  on                                                               
numerous   occasions  they  have   arrested  someone  for   their                                                               
second  felony   [charge]  and  the  first  thing  the  offender                                                                
said  was, "Well,  I guess  I'm  moving  to Alaska,"  because  it                                                               
is  common   knowledge   amongst   the   Bloods   and  Crips   in                                                               
California   that  they  should  move  to  Alaska  because   they                                                               
won't  be  prosecuted  for  their  crime  as  a  third  time  and                                                               
you're  out.  She  said Alaska  has  become a crime  destination                                                                
because   members  of  the   Bloods  and   Crips  and  gangs   in                                                               
different  states  have  moved  to  Alaska  because  Alaska  will                                                               
not put  them behind  bars  for their  third offense.   She  said                                                               
that  she  would like  a  "third  time  and you're  out"  law  in                                                               
Alaska that includes convictions in other states.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
8:35:41 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
PAT  TYSON  advised  that   he is  speaking   for  his  wife  and                                                               
himself   as  an   Alaska   resident   for  43   years.     After                                                               
listening  to  the testimonies  tonight,  he  said  he is deeply                                                                
disturbed  about  Senate  Bill 91  and SB  54 because  they  both                                                               
need  to be  sent  to  the trash  can  and  legislators  need  to                                                               
start  over  from  the beginning.    He  related  that  his  wife                                                               
has  people walking  out  of the  store  with merchandise   under                                                               
their  arms  and the  police  cannot  keep up  with  the thefts,                                                                
and  there   are  no  repercussions.     He  said  he  does   not                                                               
understand   how  legislators   could  justify  Senate   Bill  91                                                               
with  all of the  car thefts  and break-ins  taking  place,  "you                                                               
guys   are  responsible."      There   is  no  fixing   it,   the                                                               
legislation  needs  to  be repealed.    He stressed   that he  is                                                               
disgusted  with  what  has happened   to the  state,  and  living                                                               
here  and dealing  with what  the legislators  are  doing in  the                                                               
legislature.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
8:37:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   EASTMAN  asked  his  understanding   as  to  why                                                               
the  police  would  not  do  something  about   theft  in retail                                                                
stores.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
MR.  TYSON responded  that  that  are no  repercussions,  he  can                                                               
call  the  police,  but they  are  so  backlogged  they  may  not                                                               
arrive  at the  store, it  is like  catch  and release.   By  the                                                               
time  the  police   prepare  their  report  on  the  theft,   the                                                               
person  has  already  walked  in  and  out  of the  door  of  the                                                               
jailhouse.    The  committee  heard  testimony  that  jail  makes                                                               
people  criminals,  but  a  person  doesn't  go  to  jail  unless                                                               
they  commit a  crime so  they are  a criminal  when  they go  to                                                               
jail,  the jail  does not  make someone  a criminal.   Although,                                                                
he acknowledged   it might  make  the person  a  better criminal                                                                
but that  is not  his problem.   He said  his problem  is people                                                                
walking   out  of   the  store   with  his  wife's   merchandise                                                                
because   she   has   to  pay   for   the   merchandise.      The                                                               
legislature  must  create a  system where  people  pay the  price                                                               
for  doing   something   wrong,  the  legislature   can   set  up                                                               
whatever  programs   for  drug  and  alcohol  abuse  but  no  one                                                               
will  get  off  drugs   unless  they  want  to  get  off   drugs.                                                               
Rehabilitation  does  not work  unless  the person  has hit  rock                                                               
bottom  and he/she  wants  out, that's  how rehabilitation   will                                                               
work, he related.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   EASTMAN  commented  that  Mr.  Tyson  was  right                                                               
to ask the legislature to do better.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
8:39:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SHAWN  WILLIAMS   advised   that  he  is   a  38-year  Anchorage                                                                
resident,    and   he   considers   himself    a   compassionate                                                                
Christian.    He  advised   that  he  organized  the  Change.com                                                                
Repeal  SB 91  Petition  that has  almost  4,000  supporters,  as                                                               
well  as a group  of  Anchorage  business  owners who  support  a                                                               
full  repeal of  Senate Bill  91.  The  Alaska  legislature  took                                                               
many  good things,  such  as higher  sentences  for  murders  and                                                               
protection   for  sex  workers  and  grouped   those  in  with  a                                                               
terrible   bill,   and  he   suggested   those  issues   be   re-                                                               
addressed  in  their  own  piece  of  legislation.    He offered                                                                
suggestions    as  to   how   the   legislature   could    reduce                                                               
recidivism,   save  the  state  money,  and  institute  criminal                                                                
justice  reform,   as  follows:   invest  in  mental  health   or                                                               
addiction  rehabilitation   in  the  beginning  of  the process;                                                                
post  incarceration  (indisc.)   programs;  include  more  opiate                                                               
control  regulations;  and  fully fund  the district  attorney's                                                                
office.   Economic  research  has  shown  that longer  sentences                                                                
only  work up  to a  certain point,  the  same person  who  would                                                               
steal  a  car and  chance  punishment   of five-years   would  do                                                               
the  same  for  a punishment   of 20-years,   they  simply  don't                                                               
care.   He  suggested  that swift  and  certain punishment   with                                                               
a  reasonable  sentence  is  where  the  state  can  save  money,                                                               
but  the state  must send  those  criminals  to jail.   Alaskans                                                                
do  not need  scientific  data  to tell  them  that  its city  is                                                               
going  to  the criminals   because  many business   owners  share                                                               
story   after  story,   weekend   after  weekend,   of  being   a                                                               
victim.    He  stressed  that  scheduling  this  testimony   last                                                               
minute  gives  him,  and many  others,  the  feeling  that  Chair                                                               
Claman  is putting  the  fast-track  on SB  54.  He  pointed  out                                                               
that  legislator's  jobs are  on the line,  and he  has heard  10                                                               
to 1  against  Senate Bill  91 in  the calls  this  evening.   He                                                               
reminded  the  committee  that  the  public  votes  and  it  will                                                               
remember  who  supported  SB  54,  and not  a  repeal  of  Senate                                                               
Bill 91.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   MILLETT   asked   that  Mr.   Williams  forward                                                                
information  about  Change.com  and  its 4,000  members  and  its                                                               
list  of supporting   businesses  to  Chair  Claman's  office  to                                                               
be distributed to committee members.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
MR.  WILLIAMS  answered   that  he  would  put  the  information                                                                
together.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
8:42:04 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MIKE    SHAFFER,    Attorney,    Municipality     of   Anchorage                                                                
Prosecutor's  Office,   advised  that he  wanted  to  make  clear                                                               
that  he  was testifying   in  his individual   capacity  and  he                                                               
was  not  speaking   in  any  manner  for  the  Municipality   of                                                               
Anchorage   in   general,  or   for   the  Department   of   Law,                                                               
Prosecutor's   Office,  in  particular.    He  pointed  out  that                                                               
his  testimony  was based  on  what he  has  seen, and  that  the                                                               
aftermath  of  Senate  Bill  91  has  caused  criminal  havoc  on                                                               
the state.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Clearly,  he  said,   in  Anchorage  there  is  an  increase   in                                                               
criminal   activity   on  all  levels,   but   there  are   other                                                               
factors  to  consider  in  the  increase  of  crime,  but  Senate                                                               
Bill  91 has  done much  to fuel  the criminal  flame.   Mainly,                                                                
he  said,  it  is  the  manner  in  which  it has  embodied   the                                                               
criminal  community  that was  not the  case prior  to the  crime                                                               
bill.   From  his  perspective,  he  said,  it has  dramatically                                                                
limited  the  basic  tools  of  the prosecutors   and  judges  in                                                               
"our  efforts"   to  do  something  simple,   which  is  to  hold                                                               
criminal  offenders  accountable.   He  said he would  not  speak                                                               
to  whether   Senate   Bill  91   should,  or   should  not,   be                                                               
repealed,  but  he would  say  that SB  54  is not  an effective                                                                
fix  in  any   manner  for  the  problems.     His  analogy,   he                                                               
advised,  is  that  previously   the  system  was  like  an  open                                                               
wound  and  needed  some  stiches,   but  it didn't   need  major                                                               
surgery.   The approach  in  this instance  was  to put gangrene                                                                
into  the wound  and say  that  would fix  the problems  because                                                                
(audio  difficulties)  it's  had the  effect that  gangrene  will                                                               
have,  and  SB  54  is  a  band-aid  on  that  wound.    Sending                                                                
people  to  jail  for  five-days  for  stealing  will  not  deter                                                               
people.    He said  that  the  costs  of jail  are  significant,                                                                
but  they are  dwarfed  by  this  (indisc).  costs  have greatly                                                                
exacerbated  criminal  activity.   He  urged the  legislature  to                                                               
strongly  reconsider  what is  happening  and do  something  more                                                               
to fix it.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE    MILLETT    asked   that,   as   an   Anchorage                                                                
prosecutor ...                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR  CLAMAN interrupted   Representative  Millett  and pointed                                                                
out  that  Mr.  Shaffer  was  not  speaking   on  behalf  of  the                                                               
Municipality   of  Anchorage   and  he  was  not  speaking   with                                                               
authorization from the Prosecutor's Office.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   MILLETT  asked  that  Mr.  Shaffer   forward  to                                                               
Chair   Claman's  office,   any   constructive   amendments,   or                                                               
thoughts   as  to   how  to  make   SB  54  stronger   and   help                                                               
prosecutors  do their  job  better and  put tools  back into  the                                                               
toolbox.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MR. SHAFFER  said  that he  would forward  the  information,  and                                                               
commented    that   the    penalties   for    second   Class    A                                                               
misdemeanors   currently,  even  under   the  crime  bill,  on  a                                                               
second  offense  go from  a cap  of  30-days,  to a  cap of  360-                                                               
days.    Senate  Bill  54  institutes  a  cap  of  60-days  on  a                                                               
second   offense,  and   he  opined  that   that  is  completely                                                                
counter-effective    when   trying   to   deal   with   Class   A                                                               
misdemeanors  in  many categories.    He  said that  he strongly                                                                
urges the committee to scrap that provision.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
8:47:08 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MAXINE  DOOGAN,  Community  United   for Safety  and  Protection                                                                
(CUSP),  advised  that  the  Community   United  for  Safety  and                                                               
Protection  opposes  SB 54,  and especially  Sections  3, 5,  13,                                                               
14, 20,  and 22.   The Department  of  Law (DOL)  "flip-flopped"                                                                
on its  previous  position  and  wrote that  Sections  39 and  40                                                               
of  Senate  Bill 91  were  presumably  intended  to  prevent  the                                                               
state   from  prosecuting   cooperatives   of   independent   sex                                                               
workers  who   are  working  in  the  same  location   as  a  sex                                                               
trafficking  enterprise,  yet  a sex  trafficking  enterprise  is                                                               
not defined  in  the statute.   She  acknowledged  that having  a                                                               
prostitution   enterprise  is  defined  in  the sex  trafficking                                                                
statute  in  the second  degree.    A person  cannot  be charged                                                                
with   the  exception    defined   in  the   subsection   of   AS                                                               
11.66.130   to   get  away   the   conduct   in   AS  11.66.120.                                                                
Repealing  the  section   in SB  54  is  unnecessary   and  would                                                               
have  a  negative  impact  on  public  safety  because  it  would                                                               
disincentivizes     sex   workers    from   reporting    crimes.                                                                
Meanwhile,  the  proposed  language  in Section  3, of  SB 54  is                                                               
unduly  confusing,  she said.   Alaskan  sex workers  should  not                                                               
be in  a situation  where  they have  to ask themselves  whether                                                                
they  could safely  report  a crime without  being  charged  with                                                               
sex  trafficking.    The legislature   should  not  pass another                                                                
evidence-based  bill,  and CUSP  opposes it for  these reasons.                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
8:49:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
SEAN  STRAUSS  advised  that  he  has  lived  in  Juneau  for  16                                                               
years.    Alaska  is  experiencing   a crime  emergency   and  to                                                               
that  end,  he  tentatively   supports  SB  54.    Although,   he                                                               
related,   crime  is   tied  to   economic  conditions   and   he                                                               
implored  every  legislator  to  work  together  to pass  a  fair                                                               
income  tax where  all  people  and all  corporations  are  taxed                                                               
fairly  and  each pays  their  fair share.    He stated  that  he                                                               
agrees  with  some  of the  heart  wrenching  testimony  because                                                                
even  the criminals'   voices  deserve  to be  heard,  and  every                                                               
law  abiding Alaskan  needs  to feel  safe  in their  homes.   He                                                               
said   that  he   does  tentatively    support   opioid  addicts                                                                
receiving  an  opportunity   and  not just  incarceration.     He                                                               
then  asked the  committee  to amend SB  54 to  include language                                                                
that  any individual  arrested   for an  opioid addiction   crime                                                               
must  answer  these  specific   questions:  who  they  purchased                                                                
from;  where and  when did  they make  these purchases;  and  who                                                               
do they  know  that is  experiencing  an  opioid emergency.    In                                                               
the  event  these  people  do not  give  forthright  information                                                                
to  these questions,   then  leniency  should  not be  given,  he                                                               
stated.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
8:53:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JOHN  POWERS,   Owner/Operator,   Tudor  Bingo  Center,  advised                                                                
that  he represents  his  customers  and  guests.   Recently,  he                                                               
related,   a  purse  snatching   took  place  in  front   of  his                                                               
building   and   that  same   evening,   that   same  individual                                                                
carjacked  a  vehicle.    The  same  individual   came  back  the                                                               
next  night and  was  recognized,  when the  police  arrived  and                                                               
were  shown   a  video  of  the  individual,   the  police   were                                                               
unable  to do  anything  about  the  individual.   He  said  that                                                               
he  guessed  the  police  do not  arrest  any  longer  for  these                                                               
types  of crimes,  and  "give you  a little  written  citation."                                                                
Anchorage    police   officers   have   advised    that   it   is                                                               
frustrating  for  them  because  they  get  these  criminals  and                                                               
they  can't put  them  in jail,  and  they have  to  give them  a                                                               
citation.    He advised  that  individuals  are  detained  for  a                                                               
few  minutes  to  answer   some  questions,  and  the  criminals                                                                
laugh  at the officers.    He does not  support  Senate Bill  91,                                                               
and SB  54 is still  under  review because  it needs  some  work,                                                               
he related.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   MILLETT asked  what  the  cost to  his business                                                                
has been,  and whether  there  has been  a drop  in his business                                                                
due to the wave of crime being experienced.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MR.  POWERS   estimated  that   the  cost  will  be  upwards   of                                                               
$200,000  for  security  guards  at Tudor  Bingo  Center  and  at                                                               
the  new  Big  Valley  Bingo.    He  stressed  that   that  money                                                               
could  be going  to his 43  charities  and wife's  12 charities:                                                                
Bean's   Caf?,   Children's'   Lunchbox,    APOA,   Foodbank   of                                                               
Alaska,  Foodbank  of Wasilla,  Covenant  House,  First Alaskans                                                                
Institute,  and  more.   He said  that hiring  armed  or unarmed                                                                
security  is currently  the  cost of doing  business  and it  had                                                               
not been that way for 23 years.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
8:57:52 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LARRY  PARISH  advised  that  he was  representing   himself  and                                                               
would  like to  do away  with  Senate  Bill 91,  and SB  54.   He                                                               
noted   that   he  is   the   legislature's   employer   because                                                                
legislators   are  paid  by  the  State  of  Alaska  to  "sit  up                                                               
there  and pass  notes and  text back  and forth,  which I  think                                                               
the  cell  phone  should  be  left outside   the chambers   while                                                               
you  are in  chambers,  so  we can  get  something  done instead                                                                
of this dilly-dallying around."                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
8:58:55 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
AUDREY  CUCULLU,  Executive  Coordinator,   Kenai  Peninsula  Re-                                                               
Entry   Coalition,   advised  that   together   with  being   the                                                               
executive   coordinator   for  the   Kenai  Peninsula   Re-Entry                                                                
Coalition,   she  is  a  person  in  long-term  recovery.     She                                                               
advised  that  the  coalition  agrees   with Soldotna   Chief  of                                                               
Police  Mlynarik  and  the  solutions   he brought   forward,  it                                                               
supports   criminal    justice   reform,   and   it   definitely                                                                
supports  Senate  Bill  91 and  SB  54.   She  said, "We  do  not                                                               
want to throw the baby out with the bathwater."                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
8:59:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KERRI  BOSSARD advised  that  she was  calling on  behalf of  her                                                               
husband  and  herself.   She  explained  that  she has  lived  in                                                               
various  areas   of  the  nation  and  never  has   she  been  as                                                               
scared  as she is  living in  Anchorage.   She has  an office  at                                                               
the  Alaska  Regional  Hospital   and  she  does  not  feel  safe                                                               
walking  to  her car  in  the middle  of  the  day, or  being  in                                                               
the  hospital,  or  taking  care  of  patients,   or  driving  in                                                               
during  the  middle  of the  night.    She  recommended  a  major                                                               
overhaul  of  Senate  Bill  54,  she  does  not  support  Senate                                                                
Bill  91,   but  she  agrees   with  supporting   mental   health                                                               
rehabilitation    and  services    for  individuals    and   drug                                                               
addicts.    She  related  that,   "But  the  way  this  has  come                                                               
about has not been managed well.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
9:01:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ELIZABETH  THOMAS  advised  that she  was  calling  on behalf  of                                                               
her family.   She  said that  her daughter,  granddaughter,   and                                                               
she  lived in  Midtown  for  five-years.   They  did  not own  an                                                               
automobile  and  they could  walk  to the  store in  the evening                                                                
because  they  didn't  have  to  worry  about  anyone  bothering                                                                
them.   Two  years  ago,  she  advised  that they  bought  a  car                                                               
and moved  to the  other side  of town.   Currently,  they  can't                                                               
leave  anything  in the  backseat,  and she  had to  use her  PFD                                                               
to buy  a gun to  protect  her family,  she has  to look out  the                                                               
window  when she  hears  something,  and  when she  goes outside                                                                
to get  in the  car, she still  has to  look around  because  she                                                               
doesn't   want  anything   to  happen   to  her   family.     She                                                               
commented  that  her  granddaughter  attends  UAA  and expressed                                                                
concern  about what  her granddaughter   has to  look forward  to                                                               
by  staying  and  working  in  Alaska  with  this crime  crisis.                                                                
She said  she does  not support  Senate  Bill 91  because "it  is                                                               
a big joke," and SB 54 will not fix these issues.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:03:41 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MARY  NANUWAK  said that  she was  speaking  on her  own behalf.                                                                
She  advised  that she  had  watched  the floor  session  of  the                                                               
House  of Representatives,   and commented  that  it was amazing                                                                
to  hear what  people  had  to  say, and  the  comments  are  not                                                               
anything  rude because  these  are things  that  happen over  and                                                               
over  (indisc.)  every session  of this  special  session and  it                                                               
is  hard  to  believe.    (Audio  difficulties)   really   define                                                               
what   productive   activity   and  (audio   difficulties    risk                                                               
assessment.    She  asked  who  does  the risk  assessment,   and                                                               
said   she   was    asking   this   question    because    (audio                                                               
difficulties)  lawyers  and  the  senators  (indisc.)  has  never                                                               
really  done  their  job,  and their  excuses  were  incredible.                                                                
She  advised   that   she  is  not   a  brain   surgeon,   (audio                                                               
difficulties),   and she  is "not  this  and  that,"  if that  is                                                               
going  to be  the  excuse  maybe  some legislators   should  step                                                               
down  and let  the  brain  surgeons  or cosmonauts  do  the  work                                                               
and   maybe  the   public   would   get   some  work.     (Audio                                                                
difficulties)  and  when  she can't,  she  said that  people  are                                                               
a commodity  and  they  are not  even human.   Someone  had  said                                                               
(audio  difficulties)  and  she concurred,  and  when concurring                                                                
with  somebody's   thinking  that's  not  doing  the  job.    She                                                               
said she does not support Senate Bill 91 or SB 54.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
9:06:25 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MARNA  SANFORD,  Attorney,   advised  that  she  is  speaking  on                                                               
her  own  behalf  as a  former  public  defender.    She pointed                                                                
out  that  even  though  she  is a  lawyer,  she  is  "a regular                                                                
Alaskan"  who  supported  Senate Bill  91,  she supported  SB  55                                                               
to fix  the  technical  issues, and  she now  supports  SB 54  in                                                               
giving  the  judges  more  discretion  and  setting  some  issues                                                               
straight.    She added  that  she liked  SB  54 in  its original                                                                
form.    While  she  acknowledged  that  she  is  a  lawyer,  she                                                               
advised  that  that  does  not  preclude  her  from  any  of  the                                                               
frustrations  being  experienced   currently  because  her  truck                                                               
was  broken into  this  year, and  she  understands  that people                                                                
want  to  see  punishment.     One  of  the  problems   with  the                                                               
[manner  in which]  Senate  Bill  91 was  implemented  into  each                                                               
Alaskan's  life  was  [the  lack  of  explanation  of  the  fact]                                                               
that  the punishment   of someone  going  to  jail  when someone                                                                
hurts  us,  does  not  work.   For  example,   she offered,   the                                                               
person  who  broke  into   her  car  will  go  into  jail  as  an                                                               
addict,  and  they will  be  released  from  jail as  an addict,                                                                
and  they will  break  into  another  person's  car.   The  whole                                                               
idea  behind  Senate  Bill  91 was  to  stop that  cycle  and  it                                                               
was  not communicated   well  with  the public,  she  explained,                                                                
and that  is an  issue.   She referred  to Mr.  Powers testimony                                                                
about  people  being,  basically,   robbed  at  the  Tudor  Bingo                                                               
Center  and that  law enforcement  can't  do anything  about  it.                                                               
Except,   Ms.  Sanford   argued,   the  situations   Mr.   Powers                                                               
described   are   classified   as   first-   and   second-degree                                                                
robbery,  and  those are  absolutely  arrestable  offenses.    In                                                               
the  event police  officers  are  telling  the public  that  they                                                               
cannot  arrest  in  those  situations,  she  stressed  that  that                                                               
is  completely  false  and  misinformation.     She  pointed  out                                                               
that  that   is  the  kind  of  misinformation   that   has  been                                                               
spread  during this  last  year, [including  the  misinformation                                                                
about]  the crime  rate  spread  like wildfire,  and  people  are                                                               
capitalizing  on  that misinformation,   and those  are just  not                                                               
the  facts.   Senate  Bill  54  takes  into  account  the  issues                                                               
that  need to  be fixed,  and she  urged  the committee  to  pass                                                               
it  in its  original  form.   She  noted that  she  applauds  the                                                               
committee  for  staying   so late   to listen   to the  public's                                                                
concerns.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
9:09:02 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
TERRIA  WALTERS,   Founder/President,    Fallen  Up  Ministries,                                                                
advised  that  she is  speaking  on behalf  of her  organization                                                                
and as  a victim,  and that  she supports  Senate  Bill 91.   The                                                               
Fallen-up   Ministries    organization   works   directly    with                                                               
incarcerated  individuals   who are  about  to be  released  from                                                               
prison.    Ms.  Walters  advised  that  she  was  in  the  prison                                                               
system  from  1984   until  2016  when  she  was  released   from                                                               
parole,  she  knows how  the  system  works,  and she  knows  the                                                               
things  that are  broken within  the system.   She  related  that                                                               
she  wished the  30-days  for 30-days  was  implemented  at  that                                                               
time  because she  ended up  doing all  of her parole  even  with                                                               
no violations.  She continued her testimony as follows:                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
     But,   I  want   to  say   that,  something   that,   I                                                                    
     benefited  from  Senate  Bill  91,  and  that  was,  my                                                                    
     son  was murdered  two  years ago  and  the individual                                                                     
     that  killed  my son  ...  the mandatory   minimum  was                                                                    
     10  years  and now  it  is  20 years.    And,  the  guy                                                                    
     accepted   a  deal   for  60   years   with  25   years                                                                    
     suspended  to  serve 35  years with  no  parole.   And,                                                                    
     I  believe   that  was  the   --  only  accepted   that                                                                    
     because   he  would  do  three-years   more  than   the                                                                    
     mandatory  minimum.    If  Senate  Bill  91 was  to  be                                                                    
     repealed,   he  could  take  that  opportunity   to  go                                                                    
     back  before  ...  what is  called  a  post-conviction                                                                     
     release  to be  re-sentenced  so  that he  could  apply                                                                    
     for  parole.   I know  how the  system operates  and  I                                                                    
     know  that  there's  things  that  need  to  be fixed.                                                                     
     And,  one of those  things  is that, I  just encourage                                                                     
     those  that  are  part of  Department  of  Corrections                                                                     
     and,  you know,  this  reinvestment  piece,  that  they                                                                    
     utilize  the  services  that  are out  there,  such  as                                                                    
     our  organization   where  we  actually  detox   people                                                                    
     using  the bridge  device.   We do have  solutions,  we                                                                    
     want  to be part  of the solution,  and  be that  piece                                                                    
     to  help   individuals   transition   back   into   the                                                                    
     community.    And, we  know  that --  I know  that  the                                                                    
     rise  in crime  or  what they  say  the rising  is  ...                                                                    
     not because  of  Senate Bill  91, it's  the underlying                                                                     
     issue  of addiction  and people  needing  services.   I                                                                    
     talk  to individuals  all  the  time that  are wanting                                                                     
     help  and  cannot  get it.    I just  wanted  to  thank                                                                    
     you guys,  and I  support Senate  Bill  91, and SB  54.                                                                    
     And,  I just  ask  that you  continue  doing  what  you                                                                    
     are doing, and I don't want to see a repeal.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
9:12:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MICHELLE  BROWN  advised that  she has  lived in  Anchorage  over                                                               
20  years,  she served  in  the  military  for seven-years,   and                                                               
she  considers  Alaska   her  home.    She  said  she  has  heard                                                               
people claiming that under Senate Bill 91 the victims have                                                                      
rights.  She offered testimony as follows:                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
     Last  year  I was  the  victim  of  a violent  assault                                                                     
     and  attacked  by a  stranger  who  is not  an addict,                                                                     
     not  addicted  to  any  opioids,  which  is  what  I've                                                                    
     heard  some  people  blame  this  crime  epidemic   on.                                                                    
     Despite  after release  from  the hospital  situation,                                                                     
     the  defendant  followed  me out  of an  establishment                                                                     
     to the  parking  lot, pushing,  shoving,  yelling,  and                                                                    
     then  attacking   me.   I  was  punched   in  the  face                                                                    
     repeatedly,  pushed  to  the  ground,  I used  my  arms                                                                    
     to  protect  my face,  and  after  several  minutes  my                                                                    
     friend  was able  to drag her  away by  the foot.   She                                                                    
     again  tried  to  come at  me  multiple  times.    I've                                                                    
     always  considered  myself to  feel safe  in our  state                                                                    
     and  that our  legal  system  would  bring  me justice                                                                     
     if I  was wronged,  but I've  learned  that is not  the                                                                    
     case.     Due  to  Senate   Bill  91,   the  municipal                                                                     
     prosecutor    office   offered   the   defendant    the                                                                    
     following  deal:    for  pleading  guilty   to assault                                                                     
     four,  a $500  fine with  $250  suspended,  90 days  in                                                                    
     jail  with  90  suspended,  $200  for  costs  of  court                                                                    
     appointed  counsel,  and $50  sur charge,  plus three-                                                                     
     years'  probation,  and  $250  restitution.   However,                                                                     
     considering   the  restitution  office   is  no  longer                                                                    
     funded,  it is likely  I'm  no longer  going to see  --                                                                    
     I won't  ever  see that  money.   They also  agreed  to                                                                    
     not  charge  a subsequent  disorderly   conduct charge                                                                     
     that  she  had  picked  up  after  the  assault.    So,                                                                    
     someone  who  violently  attacked  a  stranger  paid  a                                                                    
     total  of $500  and is  now back  on the  street.   She                                                                    
     is  on the  record  boasting  and  bragging  about  her                                                                    
     crimes.   The  judge  specifically   told her  that  he                                                                    
     tries  to be optimistic  for  first-time  offenders  in                                                                    
     hopes  that he  won't see  them  again.   But, in  this                                                                    
     case   he  was   confident   she'd   be   back.     The                                                                    
     defendant  served  no jailtime   and walked  away  from                                                                    
     this  crime  [for] $500.    As a  victim, I'm  left  to                                                                    
     pick  up  the  broken  pieces  for  the  feeling   that                                                                    
     justice  was  not  served.   District  Attorney   Clint                                                                    
     Campion  recently  conducted  an interview  at KTUU  in                                                                    
     which  he is  quoted as  saying,  "As a  prosecutor,  I                                                                    
     strongly  believe  in  general  deterrent.    That  is,                                                                    
     you can't  catch  everyone  that commits  a crime,  you                                                                    
     can't  prosecute  everyone that  commits  a crime,  but                                                                    
     there  has to  be a  perception  that when  you  commit                                                                    
     a  crime,  that   you  might  get  caught.     And,  if                                                                    
     you're  caught,  you're  going to  get punished."    It                                                                    
     is my  belief that  general  deterrence  is minimum  in                                                                    
     Alaska,  and  that  public safety  is  threatened.    I                                                                    
     want   to  feel   safe,  protected,    and  feel   that                                                                    
     justice  is served  when a  crime is committed.    I do                                                                    
     not support  SB  54, I want  something  better for  our                                                                    
     state  that starts  with a  repeal of  Senate Bill  91,                                                                    
     and laws that are in favor of victims.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
CHAIR CLAMAN closed public testimony on SB 54.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
[SB 54 was held over.]                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
9:16:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
There being no further business before the committee, the House                                                                 
Judiciary Standing Committee meeting was adjourned at 9:16 p.m.                                                                 

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
SB54 ver N 10.23.17.PDF HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
HJUD 10/24/2017 9:00:00 AM
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SB54 Sponsor Statement ver N 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 Sectional Summary ver N 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 Summary of Changes (ver. A to ver. N) 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 Bill Contents ver N 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 ACJC Recommendations 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 Alaska Criminal Justice Commission Annual Report 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 Bill Presentation 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 ACJC Presentation 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 Supporting Document-Letters of Support 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 Supporting Document-Letter ACLU 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 Supporting Document-Letter City and Borough of Juneau 10.24.17.pdf HJUD 10/24/2017 6:00:00 PM
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SB54 Opposing Document-Letter CUSP 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 Additional Document-DoL Recommendations to ACJC (January 9, 2017) 10.24.17.pdf HJUD 10/24/2017 9:00:00 AM
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SB54 Additional Document-DoL C Felonies in AS 11 Affected by SB 91 10.24.17.pdf HJUD 10/24/2017 9:00:00 AM
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SB54 Additional Document-DoL Memo - State Sentencing (May 19, 2017) 10.24.17.pdf HJUD 10/24/2017 9:00:00 AM
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SB54 Amendments #1-22 10.24.17.pdf HJUD 10/24/2017 9:00:00 AM
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SB54 Additional Document-Leg Legal Memo on Amendment #1 (N.32) 10.24.17.pdf HJUD 10/24/2017 9:00:00 AM
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SB54 Amendments #23-28 10.24.17.pdf HJUD 10/24/2017 9:00:00 AM
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SB54 Fiscal Note DPS-DET 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 Fiscal Note LAW-CRIM 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 Fiscal Note DHSS-PS 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 Fiscal Note JUD-ACS 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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SB54 Fiscal Note DOC-IDO 10.23.17.pdf HJUD 10/23/2017 1:00:00 PM
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