Sen. Rush Votes For Three-Strikes Bill
Several Boston-area legislators voted against the legislation, saying the bill falls short on several counts.
Although the habitual criminal bill, also called the "three-strikes bill" or "Melissa's Law," overwhemlingly passed both the House and Senate this week, with support by West Roxbury's legislators - some Boston-area legislators voted against what they called am imbalanced bill.
The bill eliminates parole for felons convicted three times of one of 40 or so violent crimes, with at least one conviction having carried a minimum three-year prison term. It also reduces some mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses. passed the House on Wednesday by a vote of 139-14 and the Senate Thursday by 31-7.
Many of those voting against it are members of the Massachusetts Black and Latino Caucus, who said the bill lacks evidence-based solutions, removes judicial discretion, and does not elimination mandatory minimums on nonviolent offenses. They also say the bill will cost the state more than $100 million over the next 10 to 15 years.
One of those voting with the caucus was Boston's Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz, who represents all or part of the neighborhoods of Back Bay, Bay Village, Beacon Hill, Chinatown, Dorchester, Fenway, Jamaica Plain, Mattapan, Mission Hill, Roxbury and the South End.
The bill now heads to Gov. Deval Patrick's desk; he has until July 31 to act on it. Patrick has said he is disappointed that the bill does not allow judges to grant felons the opportunity for parole after they serve the majority of their sentence. Still, he called the bill a "good faith step in the right direction," according to the Boston Globe.
For more on how Boston legislators voted, see the table below. Click here for the full list of House votes. The seven state senators who voted against it are Chang-Diaz, William Brownsberger, Cynthia Creem, James B. Eldridge, Susan Fargo, Patricia D. Jehlen and Dan Wolf.
| Rep. Marty Walz | D-Boston | 8th Suffolk | Yes |
| Rep. Aaron Michlewitz |
D-Boston | 3rd Suffolk | Yes |
| Rep. Byron Rushing | D-Boston (South End) | 9th Suffolk | No |
| Rep. Jeffrey Sanchez | D-Jamaica Plain | 15th Suffolk | Yes |
| Rep. Elizabeth Malia | D-Jamaica Plain | 11th Suffolk | Yes |
| Rep. Russell E. Holmes | D-Boston | 6th Suffolk | No |
| Rep. Edward Coppinger | D-Boston | 10th Suffolk | Yes |
| Rep. Nick Collins | D-Boston | 4th Suffolk | Yes |
| Rep. Carlo Basile | D-East Boston | 1st Suffolk | Yes |
| Sen. Michael F. Rush | D-West Roxbury | Suffolk and Norfolk | Yes |
| Sen. Jack Hart | D-Boston | First Suffolk | Yes |
| Sen. Anthony Petruccelli | D-East Boston | First Suffolk and Middlesex | Yes |
| Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz | D-Boston | Second Suffolk |
No |
Barghus
1:48 pm on Monday, July 23, 2012
Good for you, Senator Rush!
WesternCiv
9:56 pm on Monday, July 23, 2012
Congrats and thank you to both Sen. Mike Rush and Rep. Ed Coppinger who not only voted for Melissa's Bill, but were also early co-sponsors of the bill.
Shame on City Councillors Matt O'Malley and John Connolly who voted for a city council resolution opposing Melissa's Bill. They capitulated to the pro-criminal activists who have shamefully tried to racialize this issue. Followers, not leaders.
Melissa Gosule lived in what is now Matt O'Malley's Jamaica Plain district at the time of her brutal kidnapping, rape, and murder. Even such lefty JP activists like Reps. Liz Malia and Jeffrey Sanchez voted for the bill. But then, most members of the Boston City Council are followers, not leaders.