The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. forces helped shape U.S. criminal justice overhaul

Sweeping bipartisan bill inspired by changes made recently by conservati­ve Southern states.

- By Tamar Hallerman tamar.hallerman@ajc.com

WASHINGTON — A Gainesvill­e Republican put pen to paper in the U.S. House.

A libertaria­n activist from Newton County worked for years behind the scenes to drum up support among conservati­ves.

Civil rights leader John Lewis pressed the bill’s authors to go bigger, while Georgia’s junior sena- tor helped negotiate last-minute changes aimed at pushing the legislatio­n to the right.

Those were just some of the Georgians who had a hand in crafting Washington’s most substantia­l criminal justice overhaul in a generation. The legislatio­n, known as the First Step Act, cruised through the Senate on Tuesday on a vote of 87-12 and is expected to easily

pass the House by the end of the week.

The measure still faces crit- ics, but it’s an example of a meaty bipartisan compro- mise that’s grown increasing­ly rare on Capitol Hill in recent years. And it was inspired in no small part by the changes made in recent years by conservati­ve Southern states such as Georgia, South Carolina and Texas.

“It’s easy to get lost in the details, but the overall thrust of what’s happening in Georgia and in Washing- ton is nearly identical,” said Adam Gelb, an Atlanta-based criminal justice expert who helped craft Georgia’s policies while at the Pew Char- itable Trusts.

“Policymake­rs are focus- ing prison beds on the peo- ple who present the greatest danger to communitie­s and steering others into programs that will cut the chances they return to a life of crime,” said Gelb, who now runs the think tank the Council on Criminal Justice.

Georgia’s effort

Over the past eight years, Gov. Nathan Deal made overhaulin­g the state’s criminal justice system one of his top priorities.

He spearheade­d legislatio­n over his two terms that aimed at diverting more nonviolent and juvenile offenders away from expensive prison beds, set up a system of accountabi­lity courts and poured more resources into rehabilita­ting prisoners and helping them re-enter society. A bill he signed into law earlier this year gave judges new flexibilit­y to forgo cash bail for poor defendants.

One of Deal’s first floor leaders in the Georgia House was Doug Collins, another ambitious Gainesvill­e Republican.

After coming to Washington to represent Deal’s former U.S. House district in 2013, Collins looked to apply some of the same lessons learned in Georgia to the federal prison system, which houses about 10 percent of the nation’s inmates.

“The thing that Governor Deal and other (governors) did was provide the inspiratio­n and the results we could see from the states and provide evidence that this actually does work,” Collins said.

But where Deal had a will- ing partner in the Republi- can-controlled Legislatur­e, Collins and other advocates of a criminal justice overhaul faced pockets of entrenched resistance on Capitol Hill. Many conservati­ves were champions of the tough-oncrime law enforcemen­t pol- icies of the 1980s and ’90s, while more liberal lawmakers insisted on broader changes that were anathema to the right.

Momentum began build- ing around 2015, when eight advocacy groups on the left and right, including the Dulu- th-based evangelica­l organi- zation Faith and Freedom Coalition and the American Civil Liberties Union, built a political alliance around criminal justice, said Jason Pye, a Covington native who led efforts at the conservati­ve advocacy group FreedomWor­ks, another early member of the coalition.

“All these groups agreed that we needed to do some- thing about the criminal jus- tice system, both in terms of the human costs as well as the fiscal costs of incarcer- ation,” Pye said.

The groups helped build political momentum around a bipartisan sentencing overhaul in 2015, only to be scut- tled by a group of conser- vatives, including Georgia U.S. Sen. David Perdue, who feared it was a threat to public safety.

Renewed efforts

Advocates regrouped after the 2016 elections, when Collins teamed up with a friend, U.S. Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., to pilot a different approach.

The duo penned a nar- rower bill that focused exclu- sively on tackling recidivism rates among federal prison- ers. The idea was that focusing on vocational training, mental health and substance abuse counseling — while sidesteppi­ng the more contentiou­s issue of overhaulin­g sentencing entirely — would win over conservati­ve skeptics such as then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

They found a champion in Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and policy adviser, whose own father had served time in prison. Kushner persuaded the president to support the effort, but the bill still hit speed bumps on its way to House passage in May.

One particular­ly loud critic was Lewis, the long- time Atlanta congressma­n. The Democrat said the legislatio­n needed to be broadened to address not just inmates leaving prison, but the way offenders are sentenced on the front end. He also warned the bill would exclude too many incarcerat­ed people and exacerbate racial and socioecono­mic disparitie­s via its “flawed” risk assess- ment system.

The changes in the bill “could actually worsen the situation in our federal pris- ons by creating discrimina­tory non-evidence-based policies,” Lewis said in a lengthy letter that was also signed by Democratic U.S. Sens. Cory Booker and Kamala Harris, both seen as 2020 presidenti­al hopefuls.

The discussion ultimately began to shift after Sessions was pushed out after the midterms. Iowa Republican Chuck Grassley, the chairman of the powerful Senate Judiciary Committee, added sentencing changes to Collins’ bill, and Trump began to more forcefully push Sen- ate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to schedule a vote on the measure.

The amended legislatio­n won praise from a wide vari- ety of Georgia players, including Bernice King, the CEO of the King Center, and the local chapter of the Koch-funded Americans for Prosperity. But some sheriffs groups still opposed it, and civil rights groups urged lawmakers to make even more changes.

Georgia’s senior U.S. senator, Republican Johnny Isak- son, was quick to sign onto the amended effort, which he saw as a federal parallel to Deal’s work on the state level.

Perdue’s vote took longer to win.

The Trump ally is generally more aligned with the ultraconse­rvative wing of the GOP on law enforcemen­t issues, but he ultimately signed on after he and Texas U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz secured last-minute changes making certain types of offenders ineligi- ble to serve the latter part of their sentences in halfway houses or home confinemen­t.

Ripple effect?

The version of the First Step Act cleared by the Sen- ate mirrors some changes made at the state level in Georgia, but experts caution it’s hard to make direct comparison­s between the federal and state criminal justice systems since the former is far smaller and houses prisoners who have committed dif- ferent categories of crimes.

Like Georgia, the First Step Act would expand a judge’s discretion for sentencing offenders, allowing them to deviate from mandatory minimums in certain cases to ensure punishment­s fit crimes. It would also incentiviz­e inmates to participat­e in rehabilita­tive programmin­g to earn time credits for placement in home confinemen­t or a halfway house.

The federal effort, which focuses mainly on prisoners who committed lower-level drug and weapons-related offenses, also seeks to address some past policies that have disproport­ionately hit African-Americans, including sentencing guidelines that are harsher on crack cocaine than powder cocaine offenses.

It does not make major changes to the juvenile justice system or bail guidelines, as Georgia has done.

The Congressio­nal Budget Office estimates the bill would reduce the federal inmate population by 53,000 “person-years” over a decade, or the equivalent of releasing that number of prisoners in one year. (There are about 180,000 federal prisoners, according to the Bureau of Prisons.)

While that won’t have an impact on Georgia’s state-run prisons, Gelb estimated that passage of the First Step Act could have a “ripple effect” on state legislatur­es.

“Ultimately, the greatest effect of this legislatio­n may be on political attitudes,” he said. “Washington is so polarized and paralyzed that if there can be bipartisan agreement on this, it sends a very strong signal to lawmakers across the country that criminal justice reform is both good policy and good politics.”

In the meantime, Collins has been working the phone lines, urging his colleagues to support the bill as it moves through the House.

“This is the part of lawmaking that nobody reports on because it’s tedious,” said Collins, who will soon become the top Republican on the House Judiciary Committee, where he hopes to work next year on follow-up criminal justice bills. “It’s eight, 10 hours every day. It’s working through the weekend, finding that common spot.”

Most of Georgia’s 14 House lawmakers have signaled they’ll support the current legislatio­n, although Lewis has been noncommitt­al.

One big fan of the legislatio­n is Deal, who is preparing to leave office next month. He told a reporter he sees the bill as “affirmatio­n that states can set examples for the federal government.”

Deal said he hears frequently from people who were given second chances because of Georgia’s overhaul. When asked how he responds to them, he grew emotional.

“I get choked up,” he said, pausing briefly. “Those are the kinds of results that affect the individual lives of people. Government ought to be able to do that — positively affect the lives of citizens.”

 ?? SARAH SILBIGER / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Sens. Cory Booker, D-N.J., and Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, embrace Tuesday after the Senate overwhelmi­ngly approved a bipartisan criminal justice reform bill.
SARAH SILBIGER / NEW YORK TIMES Sens. Cory Booker, D-N.J., and Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, embrace Tuesday after the Senate overwhelmi­ngly approved a bipartisan criminal justice reform bill.

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