Pubdate: Fri, 13 Sep 2002 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2002 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: Thom Marshall CHURCH GATHERING TRIES TO FIND A WAY IT HAPPENED IN CHURCH. Judge Michael T. McSpadden of the 209th District Court stood up and testified that he knows the way. Black ministers were seated on one side of the aisle, white judges on the other. The preachers had invited Harris County's felony court judges to meet and discuss how they might work to restrict the flow of young black men from Houston neighborhoods to state prisons. The way he knows to do that, McSpadden said, is to reduce the penalty for delivery or possession of less than a gram of a controlled substance. Make the crime a misdemeanor instead of a felony. Wow. I wasn't sure what to expect when I drove across town Tuesday afternoon to observe this gathering in the New Life Tabernacle Church of God in Christ. After all, your typical judge is a determined and steadfast and strong-willed person who is accustomed to running his or her own show in a courtroom. And your typical preacher is a determined and steadfast and strong-willed person who is accustomed to running his or her own show in a church. Judges welcome pastors' input That such a meeting occurred at all is a credit to those who gathered. But if it proves to be pivotal in bringing about major Texas criminal justice reforms, this meeting will earn the status of a near miracle. There were other notable highlights. Judges said they welcomed the pastors' involvement. One judge said it would be helpful to have a list of the pastors' phone numbers on the bench. That way, if a defendant needs a job in order to qualify for probation instead of prison, the judge can call the appropriate preacher to ask if he can find the man a job. Pastor F.N. Williams Sr., president of Houston Ministers Against Crime, suggested forming a committee of a few judges and a few pastors as a means of keeping the lines of communications open between the groups. But if there had been a prize for best suggestion, McSpadden would have won it. It is one thing for a newsman to write columns about the need to reform our criminal justice system's treatment of people charged with nonviolent drug crimes. Stop spending so much to keep them in prison. Stop putting felony convictions on their records that punish them for the rest of their lives. Nothing unusual about a newspaper guy saying such things. But it is something else entirely when a Republican judge in Houston with 21 years on the bench says the penalty should be reduced in cases involving possession or delivery of small amounts. Traditionally, elected officials have avoided taking such a stand. After the meeting, I talked to McSpadden to be sure that he meant what I'd understood him to say. He did. "The largest number of the cases on about every docket are drug cases, and the majority of those cases are a minuscule amount," he said. Some cases involve only drug residue, he said. And following trials, when he talks to the jurors, they always ask: "What are we doing here?" They say: "This is the biggest waste of time." They say: "District court should be for more serious cases." And McSpadden agrees. "Rather than spending our time and resources on these cases," he said, "we should be devoting more time to the violent offenders." A common-sense approach He said he does not advocate legalization of drugs, but believes delivery/possession of a small amount of drugs should be recategorized as a class A misdemeanor. "I don't look at this as a liberal approach to the problem," said the judge, "but as a common-sense approach, coupled with fairness." He said that he came to this conclusion some five or six years ago "when it was obvious that the 'war on drugs' was a complete failure evidenced by the dramatic increase of drug cases overwhelming our dockets." But he said there hadn't been an appropriate opportunity for him to profess this major change in how he sees things before the meeting this week. In church. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D