So-called 'reforms' raising red flags on law and order, weakened criminal justice system: O’Mara co-sponsors legislation to impose a one-year moratorium on the implementation of new bail reform laws

Thomas F. O'Mara

November 21, 2019

Senator O'Mara hears testimony from local district attorneys at a recent public hearing in Albany.
It is becoming increasingly clear that these new laws will put public safety at risk.

Albany, N.Y., November 21—State Senator Tom O’Mara (R,C,I-Big Flats) today joined legislative colleagues, law enforcement agencies, county district attorneys, and many others on the front lines of fighting crime locally and throughout New York calling on the state to delay the implementation of several criminal justice reform laws set to take effect on January 1, 2020.

“It is becoming increasingly clear that these new laws will put public safety at risk,” said O’Mara, the ranking Republican member on the Senate Judiciary Committee.  “We have heard direct testimony from the men and women on the front lines of law enforcement in our communities that these laws, as they stand, are unworkable and will jeopardize the safety of crime witnesses and crime victims, especially the victims of domestic violence.”

The actions, pushed by Governor Andrew Cuomo and the Democrat leaders of the state Senate and Assembly, have raised alarms throughout New York’s law enforcement community.

O’Mara is currently co-sponsoring legislation (S.6853) calling for a one-year moratorium on the implementation of the new laws so that statewide public hearings can be held on the measures.

He has also continued to voice his opposition to the new laws reforming New York’s bail, discovery, and pretrial detention processes, commonly known as the “bail reform,” approved last March as part of the 2019-2020 state budget. Among other provisions, the new laws eliminate cash bail and pretrial detention for nearly all misdemeanors and nonviolent felony cases.  O’Mara and other opponents believe that the move will result in the mandatory release of 90% of those arrested, regardless of their criminal history.

Judges will only have the power to set bail if they determine that a defendant is a flight risk. A defendant’s criminal history, or the fact that they may pose a clear physical threat to another person, can no longer be considered.  O’Mara charged that it is creating a system of criminal justice in New York State that releases violent criminals back into the community without supervision and fully capable of threatening their victims, the victim’s family members, trial witnesses, and others.

Beginning on January 1, 2020, judges will be required to release defendants from custody without bail for the following crimes:

> Manslaughter in the second degree
> Aggravated vehicular homicide
> Criminally negligent homicide
> Assault in the third degree
> Aggravated vehicular assault
> Making a terroristic threat
> Criminal possession of a gun on school grounds/criminal possession of a firearm
> Criminal sale of a firearm to a minor
> Arson in the third and fourth degree
> Money laundering in support of terrorism in the third and fourth degree
> Promoting or possessing an obscene sexual performance by a child
> Aggravated cruelty to animals, overdriving, torturing and injuring animals, animal fighting
> Unlawful imprisonment in the first degree
> Coercion in the first degree
> Grand larceny in the first degree
> Criminal possession of a controlled substance in the first and second degree
> Criminal sale of a controlled substance in the first and second degree, or near/on school grounds
> Specified felony drug offenses involving the use of children, including the use of a child to commit a controlled substance offense and criminal sale of a controlled substance to a child
> Criminal solicitation in the first degree and criminal facilitation in the first degree
> Patronizing a person for prostitution in a school zone
> Failure to register as a sex offender
> Obstructing governmental administration in the first and second degree, or by means of a self-defense spray device
> Bribery and bribe receiving in the first degree, bribe giving for public office
> Promoting prison contraband in the first and second degree
> Resisting arrest
> Hindering prosecution
> Tampering with a juror and tampering with physical evidence
> Aggravated harassment in the first degree
> Directing a laser at an aircraft in the first degree
> Criminal possession of a weapon in the fourth degree
> Enterprise corruption and money laundering in the first degree.

O’Mara said, “Where in the name of justice are New York Democrats headed?  Governor Cuomo’s Parole Board has been releasing cop killers, murderers, and other violent felons all year long.  Democrat senators are pushing legislation to grant parole hearings to dangerous inmates sentenced to life without parole, to let felons to sit on juries, and even to have state taxpayers foot the bill to set up voter registration programs in state prisons. It is a dangerous and disturbing trend of over rolling over backwards for criminals to radically redefine criminal justice in New York State at the expense of victims and their families and loved ones, communities and neighborhoods, and taxpayers.”

O’Mara participated in a public hearing in Albany in late October where a number of local district attorneys, including Chemung County District Attorney Weeden Wetmore, highlighted numerous fears over the upcoming changes, including their ongoing ability to protect witnesses and a lack of resources to handle ever-increasing caseloads. In fact, according to O’Mara, the new bail reform law stands as another, onerous unfunded state mandate on localities and local property taxpayers that Cuomo refuses to address or even acknowledge.

The District Attorneys Association of the State of New York has estimated it will cost $100 million for extra staff and other resources for offices outside of New York City to comply with the new discovery laws.

In addition to the one-year moratorium legislation, O’Mara will also co-sponsor the following legislative proposals:

> S.6839 giving judges discretion to set bail in domestic violence cases;

> S.6840 allowing judges to consider whether a defendant poses a danger to the community when determining bail; and

> S.6849 repealing criminal justice reforms enacted in the 2019-20 state budget including bail and discovery changes.