Pubdate: Wed, 29 Aug 2001 Source: Oakland Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2001 MediaNews Group, Inc. and ANG Newspapers Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/314 Website: http://www.oaklandtribune.com/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prop36.htm (Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act) SPIRIT OF PROP. 36 IS DRUG TREATMENT, NOT JAIL WE'RE less than two months into the implementation of Proposition 36, the innovative measure that requires treatment instead of jail for drug users, and the criminal justice system is still sorting out the law's impact. Already, Alameda County prosecutors and defense attorneys are at odds over whether defendants should be held in jail pending conviction and then released for treatment. Some prosecutors oppose the pre-conviction release of defendants eligible for treatment under the law. We agree with defense attorneys, however, that jailing drug defendants prior to conviction is not in the spirit of the new voter-approved law. Prosecutors argue that a few days in the slammer actually motivate defendants to make sure their cases move through the system quickly so they can get into treatment. One deputy district attorney for Alameda County said the approach is consistent with the spirit of the law because it will help people get clean and sober more rapidly. The argument strikes us as convoluted. Continuing that line of logic, if a few days in jail motivate a person to get treatment, then an even longer period would provide more motivation. It sounds a little too much like the philosophy behind the gulag in the Soviet Union. Besides, how much control does a defendant really have over how quickly the courts move? Prosecutors also argue that the law is a "sentencing law only" that doesn't provide guidelines for what happens before conviction. Clearly, the law requires treatment instead of incarceration for drug users who meet the criteria. If it intended to provide a combination of incarceration and treatment, it would have been written that way. Defense attorneys make the point that if -- under the law -- defendants can't be jailed after conviction, it makes no sense to hold them in jail before they are convicted. It is illogical to treat someone more harshly before he or she has been proven guilty of anything. The fact is, prosecutors and judges in Alameda County opposed Proposition 36 from the beginning and this latest tactic is simply another attempt to circumvent it. But the voters of California, recognizing the futility of incarcerating people with drug addictions, were very clear about their intention to provide treatment as an alternative. It's the law, and those charged with upholding it should put their resistance aside. Prosecutors in San Mateo County have done a better job of demonstrating their intent to implement the law by not opposing the pre-conviction release of drug users. Proposition 36 is a sound attempt to address a cause of criminal activities among drug users by providing treatment, recognizing drug addiction as primarily a health problem. Prosecutors need to stop their efforts to skirt the law and pitch in to make it work. If it's successful, we all benefit. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk