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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>