Pubdate: Tue, 31 May 2005
Source: Providence Journal, The (RI)
Copyright: 2005 The Providence Journal Company
Contact:  http://www.projo.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/352
Author: Edward Fitzpatrick, Journal Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

DRUG COURTS RAPIDLY INCREASING NATIONWIDE

PROVIDENCE -- The number of drug courts in the country increased by 37 
percent last year, and has nearly doubled since 2001, according to a report 
that the National Drug Court Institute released here last week.

C. West Huddleston III, director of the National Drug Court Institute, was 
in Rhode Island on Thursday and Friday to do a Family Court training 
session, meet with state officials and speak at a banquet marking national 
Drug Court Month.

During the visit, he also released a report titled "Painting the Current 
Picture: A National Report Card on Drug Courts and Other Problem-Solving 
Court Programs in the United States."

The report shows that, at the end of last year, the country had 1,621 drug 
courts -- up from 1,183 in 2003 and 847 in 2001.

"Drug courts are literally becoming a way of doing business in the courts," 
Huddleston said. "Solving problems is becoming a more accepted idea, as 
opposed to just disposing of cases and either putting people in prison or 
putting them on probation with few treatment alternatives."

Drug courts are special court calendars or dockets designed to cut 
recidivism by nonviolent offenders.

People charged with drug crimes undergo "an intensive regimen of 
substance-abuse and mental-health treatment, case management, drug testing 
and probation supervision while reporting to regularly scheduled status 
hearings before a judge with specialized expertise in the drug-court 
model," the report states.

Rhode Island has seven drug courts, including separate courts for 
juveniles, adults and family treatment. Family Court Chief Judge Jeremiah 
S. Jeremiah Jr. said the new report shows that there is a need for drug 
courts, and that the courts work.

"We know it's working here," Jeremiah said.

"Before, we'd tell them to come back in three to six months, and we didn't 
know what they did in that time. Now we say, come back in one to two weeks, 
and we do drug screenings and they're getting drug treatment."

Rhode Island spent $1.77 million on drug courts last year, according to the 
report.

"That is money incredibly well spent," Huddleston said. He cited a study in 
Washington state that estimated the average drug-court participant produces 
$6,779 in benefits, because of a 13-percent reduction in recidivism. That 
sum includes $3,759 in "avoided criminal-justice system costs," and $3,020 
in "avoided costs to victims."

The U.S. Government Accountability Office, a nonpartisan congressional 
office, reviewed drug-court research this year and found that the courts 
resulted in lower re-arrest and conviction rates and positive cost-benefit 
ratios. But "exactly what about drug courts work is still open to 
question," the GAO review concluded.

Huddleston said the answer lies in the combination of drug treatment and 
"the hammer" of a judge. "Collaboration without the power of a judge is not 
as effective," he said.

Normally, judges are trained as lawyers and are not taught to be 
"clinicians who get into the guts of someone's life," Huddleston said. But 
drug-court judges are trained to take on a more "therapeutic" role, he said.

The growth in the number of drug courts is expected to continue. According 
to the report, 215 jurisdictions are formally planning drug courts, and an 
additional 263 have submitted grant applications to the U.S. Department of 
Justice.

Huddleston said there are drug courts in every state and every major city. 
Much of the growth is in more rural areas, he said.

The National Drug Court Institute, based in Alexandria, Va., is a nonprofit 
affiliate of the National Association of Drug Court Professionals.
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