Gov. Kathy Hochul Monday stepped away from budget negotiations Monday to make a public pitch for her preferred plan for changing New Yorkā€™s discovery laws.

The governor is trying to weed out issues related to reforms enacted in 2020 that she argues lead to dismissals on technicalities. Her strategy involves tweaking standards for what items must be turned over, timetables for compliance and easing penalties in cases where compliance is less than perfect. 

ā€œLetā€™s make some changes here, inject common sense,ā€ she said. ā€œLetting there be more understanding and conversation, and not an automatic dismissal because one piece of evidence showed up later.ā€

The state Senate and Assembly excluded the governorā€™s proposal from their one-house budgets, and both Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins and Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie have expressed openness to reforms but skepticism of Hochulā€™s approach.

As budget negotiations heat up, the governorā€™s proposal could be up against a pitch from State Sen. Zellnor Myrie, who is running for New York City mayor.

His proposal would open up access to police evidence for prosecutors to make their job more efficient but unlike the governorā€™s, it would not address timelines for disclosure, what needs to be disclosed, or penalties.

ā€œWe want to be balanced in how we approach this,ā€ he said. ā€œThe prosecutor should have direct access to anything within the PDā€™s custody so we can make this a seamless process.ā€

State Sen. Julia Salazar chairs the Senate Corrections Committee, and told Spectrum News 1 that Myrieā€™s proposal increases efficiency in gathering evidence while not swinging the pendulum toward prosecutors.

ā€œEnsuring that police departments provide the evidence in a timely way, I fully support that,ā€ she said. ā€œAs we negotiate discovery reform, what is most important to me is the constitutional rights of criminal defendants.ā€

Hochul showed no interest in the alternative.

ā€œIā€™m very happy with the plan I have,ā€ she said.

Hochul has come under fire from groups like the NAACP and The Legal Aid Society, which are concerned her proposed changes will unravel the reforms enacted in 2020. Hochul insists thatā€™s not the intention.

ā€œMany of those reforms were necessary, absolutely necessary,ā€ she said.

With broad support from district attorneys and surrounded by survivors of domestic violence Monday, she called on the legislature to rethink their resistance to digging deeper to prevent dismissals that she insists hit domestic violence victims especially hard.

ā€œLetā€™s look at the application,ā€ she said. ā€œIs this what you intended? Is this what your legislators intended when you put this in place, all of these domestic violence cases thrown out? These are your constituentsā€

Those opposed to the governorā€™s proposal have disputed that an uptick in case dismissals is directly related to those 2020 discovery reforms, as she continues to make that central to her push. Many have put the blame for any appearance of an uptick on non-compliance by the New York City Police Department, which would be addressed through Myrieā€™s bill.

ā€œEffectively repealing this key reform that has furthered justice while having no reasonable connection to public safety is simply not the answer. There is no evidence that thousands of domestic violence cases have been dismissed based on technicalities,ā€ The Legal Aid Society said in a statement. ā€œThe Governor relies on cherry picked anecdotes, without documentation from cases where the NYPD failed to comply with the discovery law."

Meanwhile, A coalition of district attorneys from outside of New York City sent a letter Monday urging State Sen. Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins and Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie to get on board with Hochulā€™s proposal.

ā€œNew York stateā€™s current discovery statute has unintentionally resulted in an increase in case processing times and case delays, and actually keeps people incarcerated for longer periods of time,ā€ said Rensselaer County District Attorney Mary Pat Donnelly, president-elect of the District Attorneys Association of the State of New York. ā€œThe current system results in cases being dismissed on technicalities. The discovery proposal in the governorā€™s proposed budget would improve the discovery process and streamline case processing time while also ensuring that defendants are provided with the information that they need to defend themselves.ā€