Pubdate: Sun, 23 Apr 2000 Source: Standard-Examiner (UT) Copyright: Ogden Publishing Corporation, 2000 Contact: P.O. Box 951 Ogden, UT 84402 Website: http://www.standard.net/ Forum: http://www1.standard.net/utah_central/forums.asp Author: Tim Gurrister DRUG COURT OFFERS SECOND CHANCE They've Been Described As Both Theater And Therapeutic Justice Everybody says you really have to see one. Bailiffs hugging defendants. Tears, jeers and cheers from the gallery. Urged, even egged on -- by a judge. The first one was set up in 1989 in Miami by a then little-known prosecutor named Janet Reno. By 1995 Utah had its first and as of last month so did Ogden: drug courts. They've been described as theater, therapeutic justice, even a tent revival, turning the judge into a cheerleader with a club as the courtroom audience reacts like a pep rally to the goings on. "You really need to go sit in on one," said Rich Schwermer, Utah deputy state court administrator overseeing implementing of drug courts. "Going to drug court itself is a therapeutic experience. It's almost like theater. "A judge will be questioning a guy in denial on his urinalysis results, denying he had used. The judge will turn to the audience of fellow drug offenders and ask "What do you think?' and they'll hoot at the guy. So you get peer pressure involved." Schwermer said the proceedings are emotional and honest. "I've never seen anything quite like it in a courtroom. "The thesis is you're looking at outcomes instead of process. It's not about whichever side of the facts the attorneys are more persuasive on." Schwermer said Gov. Mike Leavitt sat in on a Salt Lake drug court session for 90 minutes and left so impressed he tried to pry $5 million out of the last legislative session for more of them. He got $1.5 million. Currently eight such courts operate in the state, including three in Salt Lake's 3rd District Court, two in the 4th District in Utah County, and one in Vernal, which is the 8th District. Second District Judge Jon Memmott has operated one more than a year now in Davis County and fellow 2nd District Judge Roger Dutson started up one just last month in Ogden. The format is fairly simple. Prosecutors screen drug arrests for non-violent offenders and those nailed for their second felony drug offense. "The majority of those who commit one drug felony, don't do another," Schwermer said. "So a second drug felony is pretty serious." Once in the program, a plea in abeyance is taken. That is, the offender pleads guilty, but if the offender then completes the next year of intensive supervision, the charge will be dismissed. But if they fall off the intensive treatment track, since the drug offender has pleaded guilty, they can still be sent to prison or jail at the drop of a hat by the judge who they will be seeing on an almost weekly basis. "We're in a therapeutic mode, but I can still put them in jail," Dutson said. "No trial. No hearing. They've already had their due process." But if they complete the program, they become "graduates" and lose the defendant tag. With jail as the club, the emphasis is on treatment as each eligible defendant gets a program designed specifically for them by a drug counselor, probation officer and the judge. Schwermer said the cost per defendant has been about $3,000 per year, with $2,500 going to treatment, including urinalysis testing up to three times a week. The results nationwide have been impressive, Schwermer said: Recidivism rates for graduates in 600 drug courts nationwide range from 4-17 percent. That compares to 70-80 percent for drug criminals in the mainstream courts. But so far, only one or two percent of the nation's drug offenders are funneling through drug courts, Schwermer said. Dutson's drug court is still fledgling, having only its second session April 11. He's waiting on funding before letting it grow. He's applied for a federal grant and asked for some of the $1.5 million allocated by the Legislature. He's expecting word on both sources by July. Once the funding comes, he expects he may need to hire another court clerk for the drug court caseload. And Kevin Koopmans, a counselor at Weber Human Services who will coordinate the treatment aspect, will likely have to hire several new counselors. "We're changing the whole concept of this revolving door situation with drug offenders, especially facing this epidemic of meth use," Dutson said. As it is in traditional courtroom setting, he said, "We see the same people coming through all the time, over and over. I would estimate 85 percent of our probation violations are from failed urinalysis tests." Schwermer's boss, State Court Administrator Dan Becker, describes therapeutic justice as "using the court as part of the treatment process, part of a team concerned about the individual. It's a slightly different role for the judge." Becker is co-chairman along with the chief justice of the Florida Supreme Court of a national Task Force on Therapeutic Justice. The task force is looking at opening the throttle on therapeutic justice, which is mostly drug courts, but has been applied to domestic violence cases, so-called family courts which group offenders by family ties, even mental health cases, Becker said. "The task force is taking stock in how it's working," he said. "The growth of the past 10 years shows it's definitely catching on." "But it's still an appendage, not mainstream. We want to apply the concepts to mainstream courts. "If you haven't had a chance to go to a drug court, I would encourage it. (It's) a very interesting few hours." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea