Pubdate: Wed, 14 Jun 2000
Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA)
Copyright: 2000 Union-Tribune Publishing Co.
Contact:  PO Box 120191, San Diego, CA, 92112-0191
Fax: (619) 293-1440
Website: http://www.uniontrib.com/
Forum: http://www.uniontrib.com/cgi-bin/WebX

JAIL TIME FOR ADDICTS

Ballot Initiative Would Hamstring Drug Courts

It's really sad that California's public debate over treatment for addicted 
criminals could be co-opted by a few multimillionaires like George Soros on 
one side and the corrections officers' union on the other. Neither knows 
much about the disease of addiction.

But instead of the public and lawmakers learning from the exhaustive 
research on addiction treatment and then crafting sound policies, we're in 
for another divisive, superficial battle over a ballot initiative.

Soros, who is a New York financier, and a couple of other wealthy men are 
funding the campaign for the California Substance Abuse and Crime 
Prevention Act, which will appear on the November ballot. It would spend 
$120 million for addiction treatment and prevent nonviolent drug offenders 
from being sent to jail. The investment in treatment is widely supported. 
The ban on jailing offenders is viewed by many drug court officials as a 
dangerous experiment.

Corrections officers say the ballot initiative would remove judges' 
discretion in sentencing. Weighing in is San Diego Superior Court Judge 
James Milliken, presiding judge for the juvenile court and chairman of the 
Superior Court's substance abuse policy committee. Milliken runs a very 
successful drug court for addicted parents of kids in foster care. His 
court has increased reunification rates for families from 30 percent to 70 
percent. San Diego judges and the National Association of Drug Court 
Professionals overwhelmingly oppose the Soros initiative.

Said Milliken: "It's well-intentioned, but it eviscerates the power of the 
court. . . . The hallmark of drug courts is to sentence substance abusers 
to short terms in jail for relapses. . . . If you tolerate relapse and 
don't have consequences, these people will use (drugs) again and again. . . 
. We are successful because we use the coercive power the court judiciously."

Clients in San Diego County drug courts are tested regularly. If they test 
dirty, they get an automatic 36 hours in jail for their first relapse, with 
graduated sanctions thereafter. Under the Soros initiative, judges no 
longer could send addicts to jail for using drugs or alcohol. The only 
choice would be to send them to prison if they relapsed many times. There's 
no middle ground.

Milliken just returned from Maricopa County in Arizona, a state that passed 
a very similar initiative to the Soros measure. He visited their drug 
court, where the judge is not allowed to send people to jail if they 
relapse. The result? Forty percent tested dirty that very day.

In Milliken's court, only one or two test dirty at each session, precisely 
because of the threat of jail.

Alcohol and drug addiction is the leading cause of crime. If we prohibit 
the jailing of addicts on probation who relapse, we will wind up with more 
addicts on our streets, more families torn apart by drugs and alcohol, and 
more addicts committing serious crimes because they were never coerced into 
treatment.
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D