Pubdate: Mon, 21 Jun 2004 Source: Kentucky Post (KY) Copyright: 2004 Kentucky Post Contact: http://www.kypost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/661 Author: Paul A. Long, Post staff reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) JUDGE TO HELP TACKLE BACKLOG OF DRUG CASES The chief prosecutor in Owsley and Lee counties hopes former Campbell Circuit Judge William Wehr can bring more than just himself when he heads to the eastern Kentucky counties in the fall to help end a backlog of cases. Commonwealth Attorney Tom Hall would like Wehr to bring along some extra hours in the day to take care of criminal cases - -- most involving drugs -- that have doubled in the past year. "It's not a case of not enough judges or not enough prosecutors," Hall said Wednesday. "It's a case of not enough time." This week, Chief Justice Joseph Lambert appointed Wehr to preside over criminal cases in Lee and Owsley counties. Wehr will join Circuit Judge William Trude, who covers the 23rd Judicial Circuit, which encompasses those two counties along with his home county of Estill. Lambert's order said Wehr will have discretion to review all criminal cases filed in the counties since the beginning of the year and decide which ones he will be assigned. "I talked with (Trude) today, and I'm going to go through the docket and see what I can do to help, said Wehr, who expects to start in September working three days a week to clear out the cases. As a senior judge, Wehr works on a part-time basis in return for an increase in his pension. He is not paid a salary, but does receive expenses. In addition to filling in for judges who are ill or on vacation, senior judges are assigned to help out in counties with high caseloads. In Boone County, which has the highest caseload in the state, Senior Judge Stan Billingsley is assigned on a permanent basis. Wehr said he expect to be in Lee and Owsley counties for about three months. All three counties in 23rd circuit are small, and they normally do not have a lot of criminal cases -- in 2003, they had less than 1,000 cases combined, according to the Administrative Office of the Courts. But a federal drug-fighting program called UNITE, which targets street-level drug sales, has led to a doubling of the criminal docket in the past year in Lee and Owsley counties. Indictments from arrests in January alone accounted for nearly 100 news cases, prosecutor Hall said. Estill County is not part of UNITE, and thus has not seen an increase in cases. "It's more than we should have," said Hall, whose only assistant in the three counties is a part-timer who works 11 hours per week. "We've got extreme drug problems in all three counties." And it's those drug cases, many involving OxyContin, that have led to disputes between Hall and Trude over appropriate punishment. Some anti-drug crusaders in the counties have criticized Trude for handing out what they consider lenient sentences. Trude could not be reached for comment Wednesday. But he told a local newspaper recently that people who traffic in small quantities of drugs deserve the opportunity to get treatment, rather than go to jail. As a result, he has granted probation or early release to some defendants over Hall's objection. Hall believes when it comes to OxyContin -- which can bring as much as $100 on the street for a single pill -- there are no small-time dealers. "If a person is selling two a day, they're generating $1,400 a week in tax-free income," Hall said "The judge and I, we just don't see eye to eye. I tend to ask for time to be served, and he doesn't see it my way." While on the Campbell County bench, Wehr tended to go along with the recommendations of prosecutors. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek