Pubdate: Wed, 20 Jun 2001
Source: American Press (LA)
Copyright: 2001 Shearman Corporation
Contact:  http://www.americanpress.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/926
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts)

REPORT INDICATES DRUG COURTS WORK

As a child, it was a lot easier to stay out of trouble when big brother or 
big sister was around to watching the proverbial cookie jar. You knew if 
they told mom and dad, you would pay the price.

Someone watching was the key then, and it appears it's still the way to go.

When it comes to helping those who are addicted to narcotics, a just- 
released Columbia University study shows that long-term drug treatment that 
includes weekly urine tests and counseling is more successful than jail 
when it comes to kicking the habit.

The testing and counseling are the backbone of drug courts which have grown 
increasingly popular since they began in 1989. There are more than 600 drug 
courts in the United States, and about 400 more are planned.

National Association of Drug Court Professionals executive director Karen 
Freeman-Wilson says they "literally assist people in getting their lives back."

In Louisiana, drug courts have captured the attention of many judges and 
lawmakers who are eager to keep nonviolent first-time offenders out of prisons.

Calcasieu Parish was ahead of the Louisiana curve - then dropped the ball. 
It operated a drug court from Jan. 1, 1997 until Dec. 31, 1998, when it 
lost federal funding.

Retired Judge A.J. Planchard was at the helm. When it formed he said it 
would act more as an ''abatement'' program and would emphasize 
rehabilitation rather than incarceration.

Funding came from a federal grant and money from the court, the Calcasieu 
Parish Sheriff's Office and the District Attorney's office.

The drug court quickly became an assembly line. Hundreds of cases were 
handled with many defendants accepting plea bargains to lesser offenses.

Privately some complained that the court was not working and that the 
rehabilitation requirement of the grant was not being met.

Elsewhere in the state, at least eight other parishes have had Drug Courts 
for at least two years and, recently, more than a a dozen new programs have 
been launched.

For its study, the the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at 
Columbia reviewed three dozen published and unpublished studies on drug courts.

Among its findings were the rates at which drug court participants were 
later arrested on new charges varied.

In Baltimore, 48 percent of drug court graduates were arrested again within 
12 months, compared with 64 percent of the drug defendants not assigned to 
the special court.

In Escambia County, Fla., 40 percent of offenders are typically arrested 
again within two years. For those who took part in drug court, the figure 
dropped to 12 percent.

Orleans Parish, which was not among the communities studied, reports a 
similar rate of recidivism among the more than 1,200 people who went gone 
through its drug court.

President Bush in May endorsed drug courts as part of his anti-drug 
strategy, but there is resistance to the idea as "social work" rather than 
criminal justice, and the past decade brought increased mandatory minimums 
for drug crimes.

"People often have that myth that drug courts are soft on crime, but so 
many offenders say, 'I can do time standing on my head,'" said 
Freeman-Wilson, who formerly served as Indiana's attorney general. "Drug 
testing on a weekly basis is harder than any jail sentence they've ever done."

Like we said, it's easier to stay straight when Big Brother is watching
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