Pubdate: Sun, 30 Dec 2001 Source: Evansville Courier & Press (IN) Copyright: 2001 The Evansville Courier Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/138 Website: http://www.courierpress.com/ Author: Byron Rohrig, Courier & Press staff writer Cited: National Drug Court Institute http://www.ndci.org/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) DAY REPORTING FINDS WIDESPREAD SUPPORT Prosecutor Sees Program As Weapon In War On Drugs It is difficult to find someone with a discouraging word about Vanderburgh County's Day Reporting Drug Court, a program that provides an alternative to imprisonment for substance abusers facing felony charges. Law-enforcement officials, though among the most cautious, have good things to say. A deputy prosecutor who heads up drug cases - a hard-liner on drug dealers and violent drug offenders - is on the court's advisory board and has gone to bat to get addicted offenders into the program. "I do not think those two viewpoints are diametrically opposed," says Michael Perry, the deputy prosecuting attorney who has headed Vanderburgh County's drug-case prosecutions for two years. "It's kind of a two-pronged attack from our office: One, cut the source, and two, cut the demand. By putting the violent and dealers off the street, we're cutting the supply, and by getting those people help who need help, we're cutting the demand." The local drug court is in its infancy - it accepted its first participant April 9. At the end of 2000, the National Drug Court Institute, which gets federal funding from the Executive Branch, the Justice Department and the office of National Drug Control Policy, reported 687 drug courts in operation nationwide. Vanderburgh County's will be a part of 2001's statistics. The stakes are big. Addiction wreaks devastation on the lives of addicts and the people who love them. And ultimately, no one is left untouched. Those who are not direct victims of crimes done by addicts still pay a high price. The cost of virtually every consumer good and service carries what amounts to a hidden surcharge to cover shoplifting and crimes committed to support addictions. And consider the crippling effect of drug-related offenses on the judicial system and the gigantic financial burden on governments to jail and imprison offenders. It's easy to see why there's a search for alternatives that work. In Miami 12 years ago, the Circuit Court of Dade County marshalled a judge's authority to help devise and oversee an intensive, high-accountability, community-based program to treat and rehabilitate felony drug offenders. That drug-infested jurisdiction saw sooner what Evansville saw later: Escalating penalties for drug offenses, triggered by a drug-abuse epidemic that raged beginning in the mid-1980s, did little to curtail drug and alcohol crimes but soon packed jails and prisons beyond capacity. That quickly became a serious public-safety issue, since it reduced space needed to imprison violent and career felons. The court and confinement overload was at the center of Circuit Judge Carl Heldt's "State of the Judiciary" address before the Evansville Bar Association earlier this year. Heldt estimates - and other judges and magistrates in the Vanderburgh County judicial system overwhelmingly agree - that "75 to 85 percent of all cases that come before the felony courts are somehow related to drugs and alcohol." Drug courts bring together judges, drug and alcohol treatment providers, law-enforcement authorities, prosecutors and defense lawyers as a team to administer a high-demand, intensely supervised and tightly structured rehabilitation program under the direction of a judge. The goal: ending a participant's drug and alcohol dependence and the criminal and antisocial behavior connected to it. The Vanderburgh County program borrows liberally from predecessor programs where accountability has always been a key component. The local program enhances accountability by issuing a pager to each participant and by requiring them to report to the staff every day at the beginning of the program and a minimum of twice a week in the final phase. Superior Court Judge Wayne S. Trockman, who presides over the Drug Court, and Debbie Mowbray, executive director of the program, believe the day-reporting feature makes Vanderburgh County's program unique. "Day reporting" means that every day, including weekends and holidays, program participants early-on in their involvement - and until they earn a lessening of requirements by staying clean and sober and meeting other program requirements - must report to a staff member. For participants who have lost drivers licenses, which is not uncommon among substance abusers, it means they must do a lot of walking or work out sometimes difficult transportation arrangements. Whatever it takes. There are no exceptions. Trockman has been known to staff weekend check-ins at the SAFE House. "It's especially important that they are monitored on weekends and holidays," Mowbray said. "That's because holidays are times when a lot of people Ouse.'" Bill Carey, director of the Indiana Judicial Center, said he likes another feature he has not seen in other drug court program in the state: beepers. All Vanderburgh participants are required to wear court-issued pagers and wear them at all times. Only Drug Court staffers know the beeper numbers - so when one activates, participants know it's the Drug Court calling. Steve Bequette, commander of the Criminal Investigation section at the Sheriff's Office, gave high marks to Trockman and Mowbray. "I think that so far, the judge and Ms. Mowbray have done an excellent job, communication-wise. They reached out to law-enforcement right away. They explained everything they were planning to do. They have been very up-front about the program. As far as that angle, I am very pleased with it," Bequette said. Law-enforcement is represented on the Drug Court Advisory Board, and Bequette attends meetings of the local Substance Abuse Council, which include Trockman and Mowbray. Bequette said law-enforcement is consulted on individual candidates for the program. "When they have candidates, they reach out to us to let us know who they're considering. And we let them know what our feelings are toward that candidate." Advice from police is taken seriously, Bequette said: "I don't think they would reach out and ask us for our opinion if they didn't put a value on it." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake