[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 146 (2000), Part 18] [Senate] [Pages 26386-26387] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]EARLY PRISON RELEASE Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, on November 23 the Washington Post had a story about a murderer that I want to call to my colleagues' attention. This is the picture of the alleged murderer, Elmer Spencer, Jr. The headline of the story reads: ``Sex Offender's Arrest Makes an Issue of Mandatory Release.'' Let me describe for a moment what I read in the story and how I related it to things I have spoken about on the floor of the Senate before and how disappointed I am that nothing ever seems to change. The young boy who was murdered a couple of weeks ago was a 9-year-old from Frederick, MD. His name was Christopher Lee Ausherman. He attended fourth grade at the South Frederick Elementary School. He had two brothers. The story said he liked Pokemon cards and was developing a real passion for fishing. He was apparently in his neighborhood, very close to his home on the street or sidewalk, and then a maintenance found his badly beaten, naked body in a dugout at McCurdy Field in Frederick, MD. Christopher Lee Ausherman had been sexually assaulted and strangled. The story described how the arrest was made. I want to talk about the fellow who has been arrested and charged with this murder. The fact that he was on the streets in this country to murder anyone is unconscionable and shameful. Elmer Spencer, Jr. was sentenced to 5 years for assault and battery in 1977, 23 years ago, and released 3 years later. Within a year of his release, he raped and attempted to strangle an 11-year-old boy. He paid him $20 to drink liquor and then tried to strangle him with shoelaces. Spencer left him unconscious after raping him. The boy regained consciousness as Elmer Spencer's attention was diverted, and miraculously escaped. Elmer Spencer was sentenced to 22 years in prison for that crime and released in 1994 after serving 14 years in prison. In 1996, Elmer Spencer, Jr. was charged with attempted rape and three counts of assault. He attacked the police officers responding to the cries for help from a woman whom he was attempting to rape. He was sentenced to 10 years, and, amazingly, released on November 14 of this year, after serving just 3 and a half years. Five days later, Christopher Lee Ausherman, a 9-year-old boy from Frederick, MD, was murdered by this man. Five days after being released from prison, having served 3 and a half years of 10-year sentence, this pedophile, this man who had attempted murder previously, killed this 9- year-old boy. The question is, When will we learn in this country? We know who is committing the crimes, especially the violent crimes, in most cases. It is someone who has committed other violent crimes, been put in prison, and often released early. I spoke to the family of this 9-year-old boy. There is not much you can do to console that family. They are grieving, obviously, for the loss of this young boy. But I told them some Members are working very hard to try to change the circumstances of release for violent prisoners. I have spoken many times on this floor about other crimes that are exactly the same--different victims, but exactly the same. Young Bettina Pruckmayr--I brought her picture to the floor of this Senate--a 26-year-old human rights attorney who moved to this town with such great expectations and passion to do work in this area. On December 16, 1995, she was at an ATM machine and a man named Leo Gonzales Wright apprehended her there. He was a man who should have been in prison. He had committed many previous crimes. At the age of 19, Leo Gonzales Wright was sentenced to 15 to 60 years for armed robbery and murder. He was released after 17 years. During those 17 years, he compiled a record of 38 disciplinary reports and transfers due to drug use, lack of program involvement, weapons possession in prison, and assaults on inmates and staff. Despite all that, he was let out early, so that in December of 1995 he was on the streets here in Washington, DC. He was able to stab young Bettina Pruckmayr 38 times. It wasn't that we didn't know he was a violent offender. He had used a butcher knife just four days earlier to rob and carjack a female motorist. While on probation and parole, he was picked up for drugs and let right back out on the streets. As a result, Bettina Pruckmayr was killed. Jonathan Hall. I have spoken about Jonathan Hall here on the floor of the Senate; it is exactly the same story. Jonathan was a 13-year-old from Fairfax, VA. The boy had some difficulties, but in the newspaper stories I read about young Jonathan neighbors described him as a smart young boy, starved for affection. His mother reported him missing in December, 1995. Twelve days later, his body was found at the bottom of a pond near his home. He had been stabbed over 60 times with a phillips-head screwdriver. After this young boy had died, they found grass between his fingers. Despite being stabbed 60 times, he was not dead when his attacker left him. This young boy tried to claw his way out of that pond, and they found grass and mud between his fingers, but he didn't make it. James Buck Murray, who lived right there in the neighborhood, killed him. Why was he living there? In 1970, Murray was sentenced to 20 years for slashing the throat of a cab driver, stealing the cab, and leaving the driver for dead. But a mere 3 years later, while on work-releasee, he abducted a woman, was convicted of kidnapping, and sent back to prison. But again he was let out. And then young Jonathan Hall, of course, was murdered. By someone we knew? Of course. By someone violent? Of course. Murray had been put in prison and released early. Shame on those who run our prison system. Shame on the laws that exist, that allow this to happen. I have asked, in this recent case in Maryland with Christopher Lee Ausherman, how could it be that a man who has been involved in such violent crimes--how could it be that, when sentenced to 10 years, he is released after 3\1/2\? This is after many other crimes, mind you, and 5 days after his release, he kills a 9-year-old boy. How can it be he is released that early? The answer? Unforgivable ignorance in the construction of public policy. I am sorry to say that about those who did it, but I cannot contain myself. Those who did it say those who served in prison for previous convictions can accumulate additional good-time credits at an accelerated pace against their current sentence because they have been in prison before. That is ignorance. We ought not reward anyone with ample or better good-time benefits because they served in prison before. Violent offenders ought to be put in prison and that ought to be their address until the end of their prison term. End of story. I am so sick and tired of reading stories about innocent people--and I have mentioned just three. I have many more. I am so sick and tired of reading the stories about state governments that allow violent offenders out of prison to walk up and down the streets of this country and kill again. Do you know, if you live in the United States of America you are seven times more likely to be murdered than if you live in France? The murder rate in our country is 7 times that of Germany, 6 times that of Israel, 10 times that of Japan, 7 times that of Spain. Is there something wrong here? I think so. Let me show you what is happening in our prison system. For all the talk [[Page 26387]] about truth in sentencing, if state convicts you of murder in this country on average you are going to be in prison 10 years. You are going to get sentenced for 21 years but you are going to be serving about 10 years in prison for murder. Rape? You can expect to serve about 5 years in prison. They will sentence you to 10 on average, but you are only going to be there about 5. For robbery you are going to be sentenced to a littel over 8 years, perhaps, and you will serve 4 years. What is the answer to all this? Why are these folks let out early? Why would we decide in this country that a murderer should only serve half of his or her sentence? The prison authorities and others who construct these laws tell us the reason they have to dangle good-time benefits in front of these prisoners, including violent offenders, is because it allows the authorities to better manage them while in prison. In other words, if they behave while in prison they can get out early. That is a terrific incentive, they say, for prison inmate management. I wonder, I ask the question about the management of Elmer Spencer, Jr. I wonder if I could get names of the people who decided the best way to manage Elmer Spencer, Jr.'s time in prison was to dangle in front of him the opportunity to be released 7 years early, so he could be on the streets in late November of this year and murder a 9-year-old boy? I guess the word is ``allegedly murdered him'' because he is now charged with the crime, but am told there is little question about the guilt in this case. I wonder if we could have the names of those who have decided it is appropriate for James ``Buck'' Murray to be on the streets, or Leo Gonzales Wright to be on the streets after being convicted of murder, only to murder again; violent criminals to be back on the streets so Bettina and young Jonathan and all the others are victims. What is the answer? The answer is simple. This is not rocket science. It is simple. It is to decide as a policy--as I have advocated for some while, regrettably unsuccessfully--that in this country we distinguish between those who commit violent crimes and those who commit nonviolent crimes. In my judgment, we ought to have a judicial system in America that says: If you commit a violent act, understand this. All over America, understand this and listen well: If you commit a violent act, there will be no good time, there will be no parole, there will be no time off for good behavior. You will go to prison and the sentence administered by the judge in your trial will be the sentence that you serve in prison. No time off for good behavior--period. We need to do that in this country. I have tried and tried and tried again in this Senate to advance that public policy, unsuccessfully. But I am not going to quit. This 106th Congress is ending without great distinction. We didn't even discuss the issue of violent crime. We should. I hope we will in the 107th Congress. I hope perhaps there are Republicans and Democrats who understand that there is nothing partisan about this issue. But there is a crying need in this country to decide that violent offenders must be put away and kept away for their entire term of incarceration. In 1991, the Bureau of Justice Statistics found there were 156,000 people in State prisons for offenses that they committed while they were on parole from a previous conviction. Let me say that again because it is important: 156,000 people were incarcerated for criminal offenses that they committed while they were out on parole from a previous prison sentence. That is exactly the case in the description of the murder I started with today. It is exactly the case with Elmer Spencer, Jr., out early and a 9-year-old is dead. This is not an unusual story. I could speak for 2 hours and more, and not just about Maryland or Virginia or the District of Columbia. There is a courageous young woman from North Dakota named Julie Schultz. Julie Schultz is a friend of mine, a mother of three from Burlington, ND. She was going to a League of Cities meeting in Williston, ND, on a quiet North Dakota highway on an afternoon with very little traffic and stopped at a rest stop. At this rest stop Julie Schultz, mother of three, encountered a man named Gary Wayne Puckett, who should have been in prison but was released early in the State of Washington. This issue knows no State boundaries. He assaulted Julie Schultz and then slit her throat and left her for dead. I won't describe the events that allowed her to survive, but they were quite miraculous. But Gary Wayne Puckett should never have been near a rest stop on a highway in North Dakota on that day. He was released early. Again, we know better than that. State governments should know better than that. Public policy should know better than that. We can do better than that. It is my intention to reintroduce in the coming Congress, in January in the coming Congress, legislation that I have introduced previously. That is legislation that would provide financial penalties in the truth-in-sentencing grants that are given from the Federal Government to the State government, for those States that fail to enact laws that eliminate good-time credits, eliminate the dangling of time off for good behavior. My legislation will use these funds to provide financial incentives for states that say, instead, by statute: If you are convicted of a violent crime, understand your address will be your jail cell until the end of your term. When and if we do that in this country, finally, innocent people walking up and down the streets of America will not be threatened by a violent murderer, a kidnaper, a killer, a rapist, someone who is let out early, and poses a severe threat to innocent citizens like Christopher Lee Ausherman. Mr. President, my understanding is the Senate is now in morning business but there will be additional debate on bankruptcy; is that correct? The PRESIDING OFFICER. At the conclusion of the Senator's remarks, Senator Grassley will be recognized to speak on the bankruptcy bill. Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, as soon as Senator Grassley comes to the floor, I will be happy to relinquish the floor. I want to speak for 2 minutes on another subject. As soon as he comes, I will suspend. ____________________