Metro Statewide Stump Leyton victory in November would bring first Jewish attorney general. Art Aisner Special to the Jewish News A s a candidate, David Leyton likes to talk about how he has patrolled the sidelines for more than a dozen high school football seasons donning referee stripes in the Flint area. The hopeful for Michigan's next attorney general said the ability to make reasoned, quick decisions in pressure-packed situ- ations shows voters that he's a capable, trustworthy leader. But that tale would have to wait on a picturesque August morning overlook- ing a sun-soaked Oakland County lake from the opulent living room of one of the area's biggest Democratic Party donors. What everyone in the room wanted to know was how Leyton, the Genesee County prosecutor, planned to keep a sus- pected serial killer who was on a multi- state slashing spree behind bars. Just a few days earlier, a manhunt stretching from Michigan to Virginia ended with Elias Abuelazam's arrest before he boarded a plane for his native Israel. The local and national media frenzy the case created was intense and exhaust- ing, but Leyton's closest advisers believe it proved worthy exposure and training for what will be the biggest political chal- lenge of Leyton's two decades in public service. "It's been a long and demanding week, but the people of Flint are resting some- what easier today;' Leyton, told the small group of distinguished current and for- mer elected officials, judges, donors and activists. "We're at the start of a very long pro- cess." A process and case that, he said, he'd love to see to the end, but also one that, ironically, he hopes he doesn't have to prosecute. A Bigger Vision If Leyton has his way, his handling of Abuelazam's case will be a key draw for Democrats and independent voters that help propel him past Republican Bill Schuette on Nov. 2. If elected, he'd become the first Jewish attorney gen- eral in Michigan history and would become the only Jew to reach the state's top three executive positions. Any potential trial date for Abuelazam, an Israeli Arab, on the attempted murder charges he already faces and five pending homi- cide cases is not expected until well into next year. By then, Leyton hopes to be using his position as the state's top law enforcement officer to change Lansing. Primarily, he's running on a platform of improving public safety, but not just to enhance a community's quality of life. Grasping the sentiment of the recession- weary voters, Leyton argues that law enforcement, and the state's attorney general in particular, can have a dramatic impact on the economy. Beyond the enforcing state business regulations, Leyton said reducing crime is an economic issue and has a lot to do with job creation. "We want to get people working again but companies won't want to come here unless they feel their investments in prop- erty are secure, and that their employees have a safe, comfortable environment to work in and safe communities to live in," he said. "It's going to be a big part of any economic revival." He's also casting himself as a reformer, proposing a political crimes task force to root out public corruption and to institute pay and ben- efit cuts for elected officials. "He's a solid candi- date said Southfield attorney Steve Bernstein, who became a supporter after meeting Leyton through mutual friends earlier this year. "He's a really good man, a great pros- ecutor, and he cares about the environ- ment. If people take a minute to listen to him and his ideas, they will really like 2010 Election David Leyton him." The Long Wait Leyton, 56, always had an interest in politics, but his professional life as a trial attorney and obligations to his wife, Therese, and their four children left little time to pursue public office. He eventually cut his teeth in the field as a member of the Flint Township Board of Trustees for a dozen years. He also served as township clerk before running for Genesee County prosecutor in 2004. He ran unopposed in 2008. He said that Judaism developed his sense of right and wrong and piqued his interest in social justice enough to draw him to journalism. Despite the profession's boom during the "Watergate ere Leyton said he turned Schuette: Congressman, State Senator, Appellate Judge By Art Aisner Special to the Jewish News B ill Schuette is one the few public servants to work in all three branches of government during an accomplished career. And he's banking on the experience and wisdom gained as a congressman, state department head and appellate judge to become Michigan's next attorney general. The Midland Republican is campaign- ing hard on the notion that the state's next chief law enforcement officer will 18 September 30 • 2010 have to be tough enough to deal with a tidal wave of parolees sweeping back into communities across the state due to budget cuts at a time when public safety funds are dwindling. He also claims to be efficient enough to maintain successful special enforcement programs underway in the attorney gen- eral's office and wants to provide more, even if the state's economic situation doesn't improve shortly. "At the same time that prisons are clos- ing and more prisoners are being released back into our neighborhoods, there are thousands fewer law enforcement offi- cers patrolling our streets," he said. "I am strongly opposed to the process of clos- ing prisons and releasing thousands of dangerous criminals early, without any effort to reduce the cost and improve the efficiency of our corrections system." As someone who has written laws during three terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, and then two more in the Michigan Senate before interpreting them as Michigan Court of Appeals judge, Schuette believes he is uniquely qualified for the attorney general post. If elected, Bill Schuette