Pubdate: Fri, 28 Jan 2000 Source: Everett Herald (WA) Copyright: 2000 The Daily Herald Co. Contact: http://www.heraldnet.com/ Author: Scott North, Herald Writer, COURT OFFERS NEW HOPE TO DRUG ADDICTS Instead Of Jailing People For Drug Use, County Program Gives Them Tools To Kick Habits EVERETT - The celebration seemed out of place for Snohomish County Superior Court. In a room where he has handed out stiff punishment to numerous offenders, including one death penalty, Judge Richard Thorpe last week stepped down from his bench to shake a defendant's hand. The black-robed judge had congratulations, a broad smile and a certificate marking the young man's completion of an intensive drug-treatment program. As the courtroom filled with applause, the man received hugs and high-fives from a dozen or so other defendants, who, like him, are trying to beat drug addiction while also avoiding a felony conviction. All are volunteer participants in Snohomish County's new drug treatment court, a program that tries to use the legal muscle of the criminal justice system to free defendants from dependence on cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine and other addictive illegal drugs. The program is not about coddling criminals, but instead a recognition that conviction and punishment alone aren't making a dent in the drug problem, Thorpe said. "It is one thing to wage a war on drugs with respect to dealers," Thorpe said, but jailing drug users "just hasn't been working." Drug cases still constitute about a quarter of the county's steadily growing felony caseload and much of the burglary, robbery and shoplifting can be traced to drug users trying to pay for their habits, Thorpe said. Thorpe and the rest of the Superior Court judges, working with others in county government, late last year quietly launched the drug court, modeling it on successful programs that have been in operation in Florida, Oregon and elsewhere since the late 1980s. Drug courts aim to get the attention of nonviolent, drug-abusing offenders, by mixing intensive judicial supervision, mandatory drug testing, swift sanctions for noncompliance and intensive drug treatment. Unlike a traditional adversarial legal proceeding, defendants volunteer to have their cases handled in drug court. They encounter judges, prosecutors, defense attorneys and probation officers working in concert with drug treatment experts to push defendants into drug-free, crime-free lifestyles. A National Institute of Justice study found that the first drug court in Miami, Fla., showed a 33 percent reduction in rearrest for drug court graduates compared with other similar offenders. Thorpe said he's seen studies where as few as 10 percent of drug court graduates go on to re-offend, a sharp contrast to the roughly 50 percent arrest level for people who don't get treatment and wind up back behind bars. Defendants who participate in the county's drug court may have no more than two felony convictions, none of them violent offenses. The charge they face doesn't necessarily have to be a drug crime, but they must have a drug problem severe enough that they will benefit from the type of treatment offered, Thorpe said. All of the volunteer participants must sign a contract that spells out how they must conduct themselves and the sanctions they can face, including jail time, if they fail. The contracts specify that the program will last a year or more and are detailed enough that they list the way defendants must dress for court appearances, which at the start of the program are scheduled weekly. "Shorts, cut-offs, midriff tops, bare feet and flip flops are not acceptable clothing," the contracts read. "No T-shirts or sweatshirt with drug or alcohol slogans." Volunteers can opt out of the program at any time and be sentenced to the standard punishment for their offense, Thorpe said. But most of the people who are screened as drug court candidates are looking for a way out. "At the beginning, I stress to them that this will be hard work, one of the hardest things they will ever do," the judge said. They will have to develop a new life, including new friends, new habits, new ways of viewing the world. "They just kind of look at me like a deer caught in the headlights," Thorpe said. Drug court hearings seem a cross between a typical court calendar and a gathering of 12-step program adherents. Indeed, participation in sobriety support groups is mandated by the court. Last week's hearing was preceded by public defender Caroline Mann, a seasoned defense attorney, checking in with her clients before the judge took the bench. "Hi, how's everybody doing?" Mann asked, flashing a warm smile. "We'll tell you later!" said one defendant, a woman who nervously chewed gum and had openly worried that the judge may order her into jail for not attending AA meetings. When Thorpe took the bench he called the defendants forward and grilled them about their progress and compliance with court-ordered treatment. Unlike a typical felony court hearing, all of the defendants faced the judge alone, without a defense attorney by their side. There were no serious violations last week, but some participants reported back to the judge what it was like to spend the weekend in jail for having failed drug screening tests the week before. Thorpe said earlier that missteps are to be expected because relapse is part of the process people go through in learning to successfully battle addiction. What the drug court guarantees is swift, certain and escalating punishment for those who need extra incentive, he said. Virtually all of the people now in the drug court program are addicted to methamphetamine. The drug, cooked up in clandestine labs from a mix of volatile and hazardous chemicals, is snorted, smoked or injected. People can graduate from drug court after they have successfully completed their treatment for at least a year and have tested drug free for a minimum of six months. They also must be employed, attending a sobriety support group and have paid all court costs. If they're successful, the charge that landed them in trouble is dismissed. The county was able to secure federal grants to cover the cost of preparing to launch a drug court, but it is covering the cost of the program on its own. There is money in county coffers to handle cases for about 50 defendants in the next year, Thorpe said. He hopes grants and other sources of money will be found to make the drug court a permanent fixture on the local crime front. Public defender Mann also is an enthusiastic supporter of drug court. "I think that the main thing we've learned is that locking up an addict just keeps them away from their drugs during the period of incarceration," she said. The drug court concept substitutes the court's authority for the addict's weakness for drugs, a situation that changes as the defendant begins to conquer addiction and takes more control of his life, Mann said. "Hopefully this will knock down recidivism and really make a change," she added. All defendants accepted into the drug court program must come with approval from county prosecutors. Deputy prosecutor Helene Blume is one supporter of the program. She was spearheading the program at the prosecutor's office up until a recent reassignment as the head deputy prosecutor in the district court unit. Over the years Blume has handled virtually all types of prosecutions, from misdemeanors to capital murder. Drugs are a common denominator in virtually every type of criminal misconduct, from theft to child abuse, she said. If the drug court works as it should, "hopefully it will ultimately mean a declining crime rate," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D