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Norm Maleng (1939 - 2007) served as the King County, Washington, Prosecutor for 28 years.
[1]
He was also an architect of Washington's Sentencing Reform Act.
[1]
Career
Maleng was born in Acme, Washington, and grew up on a
dairy farm. He graduated from the University of Washington in
1960, then served as an officer in the military. He obtained his
law degree in 1966 from the University of Washington Law School, was
elected as Prosecutor in 1978, and was re-elected seven times. [1][2]
He was involved in a number of high-profile cases, most notably
the 1983 Wah Mee Massacre, the 2006 Seattle Jewish
Federation shooting committed by Naveed Afzal Haq, and the serial
murders of Gary
Ridgway, known as the Green River Killer.
He ran for the Republican nomination for Governor of Washington in 1988 and 1996. In
1992, he lost an election for Attorney General
to Christine Gregoire. [3]
Maleng is credited with bringing several large scale policy
reforms to Washington State's Criminal Justice system including
passage of the 1984 Sentencing Reform Act, tougher penalties for
car thefts in 2007 and rethinking the prosecution of low level drug
offenses by placing emphasis on treatment options after a first or
second offense, rather than lengthy prison sentences.
Legislative
Accomplishments
- In the 1980s, Maleng supported reform of Washington State's
sentencing system, turning it from an indeterminate parole system
to a determinate scheme based upon the seriousness level of the
current offense and a defendant's criminal history.
- In the 1990s, Maleng led the effort to crack down on drug
offenders with longer sentences to fight the crime waive associated
to violent drug dealing. Maleng later led an effort to reduce some
of the longer drug sentences in lieu of treatment options for first
and second time drug offenders. Maleng won support for his proposal
to dedicate the money saved from the long incarcerations to long
term treatment.
- In 2005 Maleng targeted chronic car thieves with his Car Theft
Initiative (CTI). He dedicated deputy prosecutors to pursuing the
most prolific car thieves in King County. Working with police
agencies, the Prosecutor's Office targeted the "Top 20" car thieves
in King County. After gaining convictions on all 20, the group
pursued the next "Top 20." Maleng also went to Olympia and
convinced the Legislature to increase the penalties for car thefts.
These increased penalties combined with the concentrated efforts of
police and prosecutors caused a dramatic drop in reported car
thefts in King County from over 17,000 in 2005 to under 8,000 in
2008. Washington State has since dropped from 6th in the Nation in
auto auto thefts to 26th in 2008.
Death &
Honors
He died of cardiac arrest during an event at the
University of Washington on May 24, 2007. [1]
In December 2007, the King County Regional Justice Center in Kent, was
renamed in his honor.[4]
References