Pubdate: Fri, 01 Jul 2005 Source: Chapel Hill News (NC) Copyright: 2005 Chapel Hill News Contact: http://www.chapelhillnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1081 Author: Mark Schultz Note: Mark Schultz is the editor of The Chapel Hill News and the Orange/Chatham editor for The News & Observer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Prosecutor Praises Alternative Court Program Beverly Scarlett laughs when I ask how she can prosecute people she knows. When you're an assistant district attorney in the place you grew up in, you know everybody, she says. And some of them end up in court. But Scarlett also knows that many of the people she sees sitting at the defendant's table are there because of an underlying drug or alcohol problem. Until three years ago there was little she could do to get them the help they needed to stay clean and crime free. So there she was two weekends ago applauding some of the people she might once have put behind bars. The event was a graduation ceremony for alumni of Orange County's drug treatment court, which gives non-violent offenders a chance to stay out of prison if they complete an 18-month rehab program. People like 27-year-old Jesse Fellows, who graduated from the program April 13. "I'd wake up, go to work, get off work go get drunk, go get high, go do something illegal," Fellows told the small group gathered at Freedom House. "Mostly illegal," he added. Now he's gone back to school -- a 3.0 (B) average, thank you -- and he has two jobs. Or Tami Atwater-Mitchell, at 44, the first graduate of the drug treatment court. "I had so many charges, for a female it was just ridiculous," she said. "I'm so used to being on probation I still call Bobby Perry [her probation officer] every day just to say, 'How ya doin?'" Today she's married, has a house, two cars and a job. Her husband was in the audience. Like Fellows, Atwater-Mitchell underwent counseling, drug tests and agreed to complete an "after-care" program where she helped others. It can take all that to break a substance-abuse habit. But court officials says it's worth the extra time and effort. It's also cheaper. It costs $2,000 to $2,500 a year to provide community treatment and supervision compared to $23,000 annually to house an offender in prison. And the costs only go up if you count repeat business, says Chief District Court Judge Joe Buckner, who presides over drug treatment court. Like Scarlett, Buckner says he's used to seeing the same people in regular court -- sometimes within the same week. And while he sees mostly lower-level crimes in District Court, a federal Justice Department study found two-thirds of those released from prison commit a new crime within three years. Most of them are involved with drugs and/or alcohol. Which is why Scarlett is all for attacking the problem at its roots. She recently helped a former high school classmate -- they're both in their 40s now -- get into residential drug treatment. She would not have had the opportunity had it not been for the special court. But doesn't that sound more like social work than DA's work, I asked. "Call me a social worker, call me anything you want to call me," she said. "If I'm successful in keeping a boy from breaking into somebody's home, if I'm successful in keeping a son or a daughter from striking out at their father, mother, you can call me anything you want. And I'm happy to take it." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake