{"id":24680,"date":"2018-06-14T22:42:00","date_gmt":"2018-06-15T05:42:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/walker-signs-anti-crime-bills-2\/"},"modified":"2018-06-14T22:42:00","modified_gmt":"2018-06-15T05:42:00","slug":"walker-signs-anti-crime-bills-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/walker-signs-anti-crime-bills-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Walker signs anti-crime bills"},"content":{"rendered":"
Correction: The Office of Victims’ rights, not the Violent Crimes Compensation Board, is in charge of restitution to victims under House Bill 216.<\/em> This article has been updated to reflect the change.<\/em><\/p>\n In a Thursday ceremony at the Anchorage crime lab, Gov. Bill Walker signed a pair of bills drafted by the Alaska Legislature to address a surge in statewide crime.<\/p>\n “It was a really, really great moment in terms of the Legislature and the governor’s office coming together,” said Rep. Matt Claman, D-Anchorage, by phone after Walker approved House Bill 312<\/a>.<\/p>\n Claman was the prime sponsor of HB 312, which addresses several problems with the policy the state uses for releasing people from jail as they await trial.<\/p>\n The criminal justice reform law known as Senate Bill 91 was enacted by the Legislature in 2016 and included sweeping changes to the way Alaska handles criminal sentencing and suspected criminals in custody. Among its many parts, it created a formula-based matrix for judges to use when deciding whether to release someone from jail before their trial.<\/p>\n That matrix, implemented at the start of this year, has been criticized by members of the public and by some legislators<\/a> for inflexibility. On social media, some Alaskans — particularly those in Southcentral, which has seen a steep wave of property crime — have deemed it “catch and release<\/a>” because defendants can be released from prison soon after being charged with a crime.<\/p>\n HB 312 allows judges to consider out-of-state criminal history in that matrix and toughens the approach for defendants charged with vehicle theft and other felonies.<\/p>\n Other clauses increase the financial penalties that must be paid by those who are convicted of crimes, allow the Attorney General to criminalize designer drugs on an emergency basis, and stiffen the penalty for assaulting a medical worker.<\/p>\n The bill had broad bipartisan support in the Legislature, and on a sunny morning, Democrats and Republicans gathered on the crime lab lawn to watch the governor sign the bill. Oddly, the crowd also included Rep. David Eastman, R-Wasilla, who was the only person in the Legislature to vote against the bill.<\/p>\n Claman remarked that the near-unanimity of the Legislature on this issue was a complete turnabout from the divisiveness of last year’s special session, which was called to make changes to SB 91. Ultimately, lawmakers chose to reform SB 91 rather than repeal it entirely, and they took that approach again in HB 312.<\/p>\n “It reaffirms that what we need to do is fine-tune and move forward,” Claman said about HB 312.<\/p>\n