{"id":11354,"date":"2017-11-19T15:17:23","date_gmt":"2017-11-19T23:17:23","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/budget-cuts-hit-prosecutors-hard\/"},"modified":"2017-11-19T15:17:23","modified_gmt":"2017-11-19T23:17:23","slug":"budget-cuts-hit-prosecutors-hard","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/budget-cuts-hit-prosecutors-hard\/","title":{"rendered":"Budget cuts hit prosecutors hard"},"content":{"rendered":"
This is a part of a continuing series examining the effects of budget cuts to state services.<\/em><\/p>\n To see how state budget cuts are affecting Alaska’s legal system, head to Juneau’s courthouse and search the court calendar for misdemeanor drug crimes.<\/p>\n You’ll be hard-pressed to find one.<\/p>\n The Alaska Department of Law has all but stopped prosecuting misdemeanor drug offenses in Juneau that aren’t linked to a more serious crime. The City and Borough of Juneau, which has taken over prosecution of most misdemeanors in the city, doesn’t take drug cases.<\/p>\n “That is a category of offenses that falls into sort of a no-man’s land,” District Attorney Angie Kemp told the Empire.<\/p>\n It’s perhaps the most glaring example of a problem facing Juneau, and Alaska as a whole. Facing a $2.7 billion annual budget deficit, lawmakers have acted to cut costs. Some of those cuts have fallen on Alaska’s public safety departments even as those same departments try to cope with a crime wave linked to Alaska’s ongoing epidemic of drug addiction.<\/p>\n In Juneau, the number of “Part 1 crimes” — a category that includes murder, rape, robbery, burglary and theft — rose from 1,081 in 2014 to 1,879 in 2016, according to statistics provided by the Juneau Police Department to the city’s public safety task force. This year, according to projections based on the first six months of the year, there will be 2,038 such crimes.<\/p>\n “If you’ve got a homicide case in one hand and a misdemeanor drug case comes in … I need to make a judgment call,” Kemp said.<\/p>\n If you’ve ever watched “Law and Order,” you know the role district attorneys play in the criminal justice system. Police arrest suspects, but it’s the job of the district attorney (and fellow prosecutors) to prove in front of a judge that a suspect is guilty.<\/p>\n Before becoming the capital city’s district attorney in June<\/a>, Kemp was born and raised here. She worked in the DA’s office as an assistant in 2004, as an intern in 2007, and as an assistant district attorney starting in 2008.<\/p>\n She said it’s easy to see the difference between then and now.<\/p>\n On one of Kemp’s bookshelves is a copy of Truman Capote’s 1966 novel “In Cold Blood.” Atop another is a wooden sign with an appropriate inscription: “Due to recent cutbacks, the light at the end of the tunnel has been turned off.”<\/p>\n Public safety budgets peaked in the second half of 2013, according to figures from the nonpartisan Legislative Finance Division. According to figures presented to the Legislature in October<\/a>, the judiciary and the departments of Law, Public Safety and Corrections had a combined budget of just under $700 million.<\/p>\n When Kemp became an assistant district attorney, there were four prosecutors on the third floor of Juneau’s Dimond Courthouse. Today, there are three. There’s also fewer office staff to handle the daily paperwork, which means prosecutors have less time to devote to cases<\/a>. <\/p>\n “We’re now more in triage mode,” Kemp said.<\/p>\n There’s a snowball effect to state cuts, she explained. Last year, Alaska’s Chief Justice (in charge of budgets for the judiciary) closed courthouses on Friday afternoons as a cost-cutting measure.<\/p>\n As a result, prosecutors have much less time to organize grand jury proceedings to obtain indictments. There are fewer time slots for trials.<\/p>\n “I don’t know that there’s one right answer, but I think what I can say is that we were just cut too deeply,” Kemp said.<\/p>\n Walk down Seward Street from the courthouse, stop into city hall, and you’ll find a different scene.<\/p>\n