Pubdate: Tue, 28 Oct 2003 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2003 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Howard Pankratz, Denver Post Legal Affairs Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) 1 POSITIVE DRUG TEST CAN END PAROLE Colo. High Court Affirms Board's Authority To Return Man To Prison The Colorado Board of Parole has the authority to revoke parole and return a parolee to prison based on a single positive drug test, the Colorado Supreme Court ruled Monday. The decision came in the case of Alexander H. Whidden, who was on parole and, as a condition of his parole, was required to submit to random drug testing. Whidden, 28, was placed in the Intensive Supervision Program, where parolees undergo supervised drug testing. They provide as many as four or five samples for testing per month. Whidden was tested three times before his parole revocation hearing. The first two tests were negative, but the third was positive for cocaine. Based on the positive drug test, Whidden's parole officer filed a complaint alleging violation of the parole agreement. Whidden was returned to prison. Phil Cherner, Whidden's lawyer, felt that the standard is unduly harsh for parolees. "When an inmate is first released from prison, they are in a whole new environment," Cherner said Monday. "It is a major transition to go from the jailhouse to somebody's home ... and there is no understanding of the stress." The court concluded that the 1991 Substance Abuse Act authorizes, but doesn't require, the board to revoke parole and return a parolee to prison based upon a single positive drug test. Here, the administrative hearing officer acted properly in returning him to prison, the court said. Whidden had argued that the board lacked authority to revoke his parole based on a single positive drug test, or, alternatively, if the board could revoke his parole, it did not possess the authority to return him to prison. Whidden argued that the only sanctions the board is authorized to impose after a positive test are mandatory participation in a drug or mental-health program, placement in a community correctional nonresidential program, or one of several other "intermediate sanctions." Justice Michael Bender said that parole officers initiate revocation proceedings wherever they suspect a condition of parole has been violated. Where a parolee violates a condition of his parole agreement, rather than committing a separate criminal offense, the complaint is considered discretionary and is decided on a case- by-case basis, Bender said. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk