Pubdate: Mon, 17 Oct 2005 Source: Courier-Journal, The (KY) Copyright: 2005 The Courier-Journal Contact: http://www.courier-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/97 Note: Only publishes local LTEs Author: Alan Maimon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) COURT WATCHERS KEEP TABS ON CLAY COUNTY DRUG CASES Group Tries To Hold System Accountable MANCHESTER, Ky. -- For more than a year, John Becknell has spent nearly 15 hours every week painstakingly taking notes in the front row of Clay County courtrooms. He is one of about 70 people who have volunteered to monitor drug cases that pass through the courts, with the goal of holding prosecutors and judges accountable in the face of Clay County's epidemic drug problem. "We're asking the courts to stand up and be accountable," said Becknell, 57, retired owner of a commercial refrigeration business. "I think what we're doing can bring about a lot of change." Becknell and his "court watchers" track every local drug and alcohol case through a database and plan to issue periodic reports. The first report, published in January in the Manchester newspaper, summarized 835 felony and misdemeanor cases during a three-month period the previous summer. The report made no recommendations or conclusion about how cases were handled. Becknell said the next report will analyze why cases are dismissed and how the court system deals with repeat offenders. And for Becknell, the work is personal. His two sons' struggles with drugs left him wondering whether prosecutors and judges in Clay County were doing all they could to get offenders help or put them in jail. The county's court system last year handled more cocaine cases than any other Eastern Kentucky county, according to state court records. "My experience, motivation and passion come from my family situation," Becknell said. "My family and friends have been touched by devastation. I don't want to see any more lives destroyed." "I perceived an attitude in the court system that alcohol and marijuana cases aren't taken very seriously," he said. "I know marijuana is a gateway drug." Some police, judges and prosecutors said the volunteer group, Court Watch of Clay County, has helped increase the civic-mindedness of citizens. But other prosecutors and some defense lawyers dismiss the court watchers as vigilantes, question their tactics and wonder whether they influence jury decisions by their presence in courtrooms. Pro and con Clay District Judge Renee Muncy said the added scrutiny prompted her to hold fewer bench conferences so the court watchers and other members of the public could follow proceedings more easily. "The public is finally taking notice of the court system," Muncy said. "It's important for the public to know what's happening in court." She said she recently asked Becknell to evaluate her performance on the bench. Stephan Charles, a Manchester defense lawyer, believes the court watchers' monitoring of cases can hinder a jury's ability to remain impartial and unbiased. He recently filed a motion asking Clay Circuit Judge Cletus Maricle for permission to ask prospective jurors about whether the program affected their views on drugs and the court system. Charles was representing a defendant in a drug case who ended up pleading guilty before trial and was sentenced to three years in a diversion program. Charles could not be reached for comment. Maricle said he approved the motion but didn't find that prospective jurors were predisposed to find drug suspects guilty because of monitoring. The defendant, Joe Bunch, couldn't be reached for comment. More jurors? The court watchers include students, business owners, farmers and retired police officers. They range in age from 20 to 73. Most have high school educations or higher. Maricle and Clay Commonwealth's Attorney Gary Gregory said the work of the court watchers has increased the number of college-educated and employed people willing to sit on juries. Fewer are trying to be excused from jury duty, he said. Said Gregory, "They have set an example of conduct." But Gregory said he has had difficulty making the court watchers understand why he dismisses some cases. "It hurts me that sometimes I can't explain to them the rationale of why something did or didn't happen," Gregory said. He said he has struggled at times to explain the finer points of rules about when evidence can and cannot be used and the difficult judgment calls he has to make about whether to dismiss a case or offer a plea bargain. Becknell admitted his group has grappled with some court intricacies, including understanding what is meant by a dismissal "without prejudice." It means the case can be brought up again with new evidence. Becknell said he hopes his next report will provide an analysis of the prosecutor's performance -- showing how many cases were dismissed and why. "He's said he wants to work with us on this," Becknell said of Gregory. "We're not out to make enemies." 'Church watchers'? Deno Gray, 46, a Manchester shop owner, said the court watchers have helped the county confront an epidemic. "There is a desperate need for that in this county," said Gray, who is not a court watcher because he operates his dry-cleaning business alone. But Rick Whitehead, a local assistant prosecutor, wrote a satirical article in the same newspaper that published Becknell's findings, proposing a program called "church watch." "We would go down to the church and see who was there and who was not on Sunday morning," Whitehead wrote. "We would count who prayed when the preacher did and who kept their eyes open and looked around." Asked last month about the group, Whitehead said, "The jury is still out." Whitehead said the group will be doing a public service only if it educates the public about how the court system works. "If they explain why certain things are happening in the courts, I think they'll lose all that vigilanteism," Whitehead said. "If they don't, then they've enhanced their vigilanteism." Doug Abner, pastor of Manchester Community Church, part of a regional anti-drug coalition of some 60 churches, rejects Whitehead's criti-cism but admits that churches bear some responsibility for the drug problem. "We sat behind our stained-glass windows and let a lot happen," said Abner, who is also a court watcher. "But I think we've instilled some hope now." Anti-drug rally not enough The idea for court watch grew out of a May 2004 anti-drug rally in Manchester where an estimated 3,500 people marched in the rain to express their anger and anguish over the county's drug problem. Becknell was there as a member of Christians for a Drug-Free Clay County, the church coalition that organized the event. "The rally was a great thing, but I was convinced that we needed to confront the problem everywhere it existed," Becknell said. Becknell met with Operation UNITE, a federally funded anti-drug task force based in Hazard, and together they conceived the idea for the court-watch program. At the next meeting of the church coalition, Becknell asked for volunteers, and several dozen signed up, including Margaret Davidson. Once a month, Davidson takes a day off from her family-owned Davidson Insurance Agency in Manchester to help track cases in district court. "I wanted to get involved, because I was concerned about what drugs were doing to our community," said Davidson, whose daughter also comes to court during her college breaks. "This is the only way to know how the court system is working." Operation UNITE sponsors the program and has purchased equipment for the group, including a portable computer, which contains the database of cases and weekly schedule for each court watcher. Karen Engle, executive director of Operation UNITE, said Becknell has helped set up similar programs in other Eastern Kentucky counties. Based on the Clay County model, court-watch programs are now operating in Bell, Pulaski, Knox and Martin counties. Becknell travels around the region with a training manual and PowerPoint presentation that advises would-be court watchers to sit in the front of the courtroom, dress professionally, and take notes on each case directly on a copy of the court docket for accuracy. Personal toll Becknell said effective courts and treatment facilities would help drug addicts and abusers beat their problem. "I don't want to see any more lives destroyed," he said. Becknell's younger son, Garrard, 30, has an arrest record that includes one felony and three misdemeanor charges, including an arrest this summer for possession of a controlled substance and public intoxication. His trial is set for Nov 7. Becknell's older son, also named John, 33, is recovering from cocaine and prescription drug addiction with help from a pastor. He is married and works as a heating and cooling service technician. He said he understands his father's involvement in the court-watch program. "The stuff my family went through got him to where he is now," the younger John Becknell said. "Sometimes in southeastern Kentucky, you have good ol' boy clubs, but people are waking up to that now." - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman