

RELATED: Election 2022: What happens if a race is too close to call in New York? "With respect to bail reform my position is the following, we should look at the data, but we should also as we look at bail reform, we should not look at look at it in isolation." "All throughout my public career, I've been focusing on public safety," James said. We asked James if she would be open to making changes to the cashless bail laws that have been in effect since 2020. RELATED: 2022 Midterm Elections: When you can expect to learn the results More data means more victims and I feel that one victim is one victim too many." "One thing that was troubling to me is the current attorney general recently said she needed to see more data before she'd revisit any changes to bail reform. "I would use the bully pulpit," Henry said. He says he also believes bail reform has contributed to the rise in robberies and break-ins and says he would work with state lawmakers to have the law repealed. RELATED: Election 2022: Lee Zeldin stays on message in campaign's final days

Henry says when it comes to public safety, he would create a Joint Task Force on certain issues like organized crime and insurance fraud.

"It’s crime, it's corruption, it's the cost of living." "The issues that we focus on transcend party affiliation," Henry explained. Her opponent, Michael Henry, is not as well-known but toured counties across the state running on the message that he is the one to fight crime, whether in the streets of Brooklyn or the halls of the state capitol in Albany. RELATED: Election 2022: Kathy Hochul navigates campaign homestretch "There's only one system of law, not for the rich, but one for all of us." "We just make sure that the laws apply to all of us equally and fairly," James said.
