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- <text id=93TT2089>
- <link 93TO0103>
- <title>
- Aug. 23, 1993: Laying Down The Law
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 23, 1993 America The Violent
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER, Page 22
- Laying Down The Law
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Trying to shed his party's reputation as law-and-order wimps,
- President Clinton steps forward with a tough new plan to fight
- crime
- </p>
- <p>By NANCY GIBBS--With reporting by James Carney, Elaine Shannon and Nancy Traver/Washington
- </p>
- <p> President Clinton could not have known, of course, that the
- week he picked to talk about crime would be the week crime was
- what everyone was talking about. On Tuesday, there was the man
- in fatigues who shot up a McDonald's in Kenosha, Wisconsin.
- The same day in Kansas City, Missouri, a 15-year-old went to
- the movies with his mother--and shot her as they watched the
- film. "I don't know why I did it," he said. On Thursday in Burlingame,
- California, a man walked into a real estate office, shot one
- broker and wounded another before trying to kill himself. He
- had just been evicted from his home.
- </p>
- <p> And then Friday brought yet more troubling news, when police
- announced that they had identified the body of James Jordan,
- father of superjock Michael Jordan, shot to death and floating
- in a creek in South Carolina. That was the kind of crime people
- will be talking about for a long time.
- </p>
- <p> It was a fitting week, then, for Clinton to stand in the Rose
- Garden, ringed by rigid men and women in blue, and declare his
- support for a major crime bill based on the premise that "the
- first duty of any government is to try to keep its citizens
- safe, but clearly too many Americans are not safe today." Both
- the mood of the country and the climate of his presidency called
- for the flashing of a sword. That only left the question of
- whether the bill would pass and whether it would work.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's plan, which will be formally introduced once Congress
- returns from its summer recess, has the distinct ring of traditional
- Republican law-and-order rhetoric, though it includes a basket
- of provisions designed to assuage liberal Democrats. The new
- bill calls for spending $3.4 billion for 50,000 new police officers,
- a "major down payment," Clinton said, on his campaign promise
- for 100,000 new cops. A centerpiece of the plan is the Brady
- bill, which would mandate a five-working-day waiting period
- for gun purchases. Other provisions would send young offenders
- to military-style boot camps instead of prison. Clinton would
- limit the ability of those convicted of capital crimes to file
- "habeas corpus" appeals endlessly through the federal courts,
- and at the same time expand to 47 the number of crimes subject
- to the death penalty.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton also moved by Executive Order to ban the import of assault
- pistols like the Israeli-made Uzi and tightened up the licensing
- rules for gun dealers to make it harder for people to run gun
- shops out of hotel rooms or the trunks of their cars. Under
- his new rules, anyone applying for a permit to sell weapons
- will be fingerprinted and subject to a background check.
- </p>
- <p> After a summer of fighting partisan attempts to label him a
- "tax-and-spend liberal," Clinton's sprawling crime package should
- provide some much needed political relief. It allows him to
- do something both popular and tough before having to ask for
- yet another tax increase to fund his health-care reform package.
- Unlike the essential, but invisible, benefits of deficit reduction,
- putting more police on the streets yields an immediate and tangible
- dividend. And by choosing an image dear to the hearts of Republicans,
- he had a chance of avoiding another ugly, partisan showdown.
- The bill's drafters took pains to appeal to the members across
- the aisle. "We took the best from both sides," said one. "That's
- what makes it a good bill."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton, however, is fighting a credibility gap on the law-and-order
- issue. In one sense he is bound by the traditions of a party
- that has never been very well equipped for crime fighting. The
- Democrats' weapons of choice are reason and opportunity; they
- want to understand crime as much as to fight it, to offer the
- criminal a chance at a better life so he will see the error
- of his ways. In his years with the centrist Democratic Leadership
- Council, Clinton tried to challenge party orthodoxy by getting
- beyond the debate over the reasons for crime and talking more
- about the responses to it. He has long advocated some of the
- ideas that surfaced last week, like spending $100 million to
- establish a "police corps" that would encourage young people
- to serve as police officers for four years in exchange for college
- scholarships. And he has been a firm supporter of the death
- penalty, to the point of flying home in the middle of his presidential
- campaign to deny clemency for a convicted murderer. "It's an
- issue that unites inner cities and suburbs," says Al From, executive
- director of the D.L.C. "Clinton has always understood that."
- </p>
- <p> The problem is that the public, for now, doesn't seem to believe
- it. For all Clinton's efforts, the polls reveal a skeptical
- audience. One survey by USA Today/Gallup/CNN released last week
- showed that Clinton's approval rating for handling crime so
- far--32%, compared with 54% disapproval--was worse than
- his overall job-approval rating. Yet he is likely to get a boost
- from acting on the issue. In a TIME/CNN poll conducted last
- week, 61% of those surveyed say crime is increasing in their
- community and 57% think the Federal Government can do something
- significant about the problem.
- </p>
- <p> To pass his legislation, Clinton must hold together a fragile
- alliance of liberals and conservatives. George Bush sponsored
- a package that was similar in many ways to Clinton's, only to
- see it die in the Senate. To forestall such failure, Clinton's
- bill depends largely on a clever bit of horse trading. The idea
- is that liberals--eager to appear hard-nosed--would accept
- the death penalty and the limitations on habeas corpus appeals
- in order to get the gun control they so ardently desire, while
- conservatives, eager to appear constructive, would make the
- reverse trade.
- </p>
- <p> The main sticking point was habeas corpus, the constitutional
- provision that allows state prisoners to challenge their convictions
- in federal courts. Since the restoration of the death penalty
- in 1976, some defendants have used the habeas rules to extend
- the appeals process and delay executions for a decade on average.
- The Supreme Court in recent years has scaled back the ability
- of convicts to appeal, and liberals in Congress have tried to
- restore those rights through legislation. Clinton's point man,
- Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Joseph Biden, spent much
- of last winter working on finding a compromise that both sides
- could swallow. Under the new bill, an inmate would be limited
- to one habeas petition after all other appeals have been exhausted
- and would have to file it within six months of his final state
- appeal.
- </p>
- <p> That was not likely to satisfy civil-liberties advocates, who
- can point to numerous cases in which underpaid, overworked or
- inexperienced defense lawyers missed crucial evidence that surfaced
- only on appeal. Biden and Attorney General Janet Reno tried
- to head off that objection by offering to guarantee and fund
- competent, experienced lawyers for defendants in capital cases.
- "Good-quality defense counsel in death-penalty cases reduces
- trial errors," says a law-enforcement representative who took
- part in the negotiations. "We can live with that. We can even
- live with federally mandated counsel standards if they're not
- intrusive."
- </p>
- <p> But congressional liberals are still bound to resist expanding
- capital punishment, especially given the absence of evidence
- that doing so will actually prevent violent crime. "If you can
- show me how adding 50 more death-penalty provisions is going
- to deter one person, then I am for it," says Michigan Congressman
- John Conyers, a leader of the Congressional Black Caucus. "Why
- not 100 more? How about I reach your 100 and I bid 110, and
- someone else that's tougher on crime is for 150? So what? The
- one thing that's been proved in my 30 years in this business
- is that you can't deter people by guaranteeing them that they
- will go to jail or be executed."
- </p>
- <p> Liberals did find some things to cheer, however, such as the
- more holistic approach to drug offenders. "If you have mandatory
- drug treatment in the prisons, you can get a lot done," says
- New York Congressman Charles Schumer. "You say to criminals,
- `You're not getting out of jail till you're drug-free.'" Others
- applauded the $100 million in grants to schools to develop anticrime
- programs, and the idea of sending young, first-time offenders
- to boot camps, where they get heavy discipline and a second
- chance, rather than sending them to jail for their graduate
- training in criminal behavior.
- </p>
- <p> As for the expansion of community policing, the obstacle was
- not political but financial. "It's only fair," said New York's
- Schumer of the proposal to fund 50,000 new police officers.
- "If Kansas gets wheat subsidies, we should get cop subsidies,"
- he told the New York Daily News, though there was no guarantee
- in the package that big cities would have first claim on the
- new police officers.
- </p>
- <p> Though some Republicans reacted favorably to Clinton's bill,
- particularly since it incorporated so many pieces of their platform,
- they were unwilling to cede him so valuable an issue. G.O.P.
- lawmakers complained that the amount of money proposed for new
- prisons, $700 million, fell far short. They also wanted to expand
- mandatory-sentencing guidelines, which Attorney General Reno
- loudly, adamantly opposed.
- </p>
- <p> Of greater importance than the politics, of course, is the impact.
- As with other bills that get chewed up and spit out by the legislative
- machinery, this one is not expected by criminologists to have
- a stunning effect on crime. Though most Americans support capital
- punishment (77% in the TIME/CNN poll), many crime experts challenge
- its usefulness for anything other than pure retribution. The
- problem, they argue, is that the fastest growth in violent crime
- is occurring among teenagers--from 1986 to 1991, murders committed
- by teens ages 14 to 17 grew by 124%, while among adults 25 and
- over, murder actually declined slightly--and teenagers are
- least likely to be concerned with the threat of the electric
- chair. "Many of them face death every day of their lives," says
- James Fox, dean of the College of Criminal Justice at Northeastern
- University. "They don't think about the possibility--as remote
- as it is--that they'll someday die for a crime. These kids
- are all armed and in gangs, and they worry about dying next
- week."
- </p>
- <p> Likewise the Brady bill, even combined with Clinton's Executive
- Order banning the import of assault pistols, will have little
- impact on young men who already have their guns or can easily
- steal them. The weapons of choice on the streets right now are
- made in America. Guns like the TEC-9, MAC-10 and MAC-11 semiautomatic,
- though inaccurate, are cheap, terrifying, easily hidden and
- handily converted to automatic. Sales have soared since 1989,
- when President Bush banned the import of semiautomatic assault
- rifles such as the Chinese-made AK-47 knock-off used by a deranged
- gunman to shoot schoolchildren in Stockton, California, in 1989.
- </p>
- <p> Cash-hungry nations like China and the former Eastern bloc countries
- have found a niche market in guns that can slip in even under
- the new regulations. "As opposed to cheap, shoddy Saturday-night
- specials," says Jack Killorin, spokesman for the Bureau of Alcohol,
- Tobacco and Firearms, "you've got very high-quality firearms
- coming in at bargain-basement prices." A fine Czech Republic
- semiautomatic handgun called the CZ, formerly made for infantry
- use, sells for about $250, in contrast to $700 to $850 for a
- comparable Austrian or Swiss handgun.
- </p>
- <p> Far more significant would be a decision to ban the domestic
- production of semiautomatics, a move that Clinton supports in
- principle but that might be politically impossible. Though weakened
- by recent defeats over gun-control measures in New Jersey and
- Virginia, the National Rifle Association would muster all its
- forces to prevent such an infringement.
- </p>
- <p> Attorney General Reno, however, is confident that stricter gun
- control is possible. "The NRA doesn't particularly care for
- me," she told TIME last week, "But it's important for the NRA
- to understand what this stuff has done to America. I just think
- the American people are sick and fed up with what assault weapons
- have done. I can remember the first time I saw an assault weapon.
- It is deadly. It is a horrible thing. The American people have
- come to realize what these weapons are doing on our streets.
- They are saying, Enough is enough is enough."
- </p>
- <p> As politically promising as the crime bill is for Clinton, it
- does carry some risk. If the legislation falters once again,
- Biden and Clinton may decide to detach the Brady bill and pass
- it separately. But some supporters of the whole crime bill want
- to keep Brady attached, as a lure for liberals to vote for the
- entire package. Given the popular support for some kind of serious
- action, Clinton cannot afford to let this bill crumble into
- unrecognizable pieces, another victim of partisan gridlock.
- That would be a crime the public would be slow to forgive.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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