Pubdate: Sat, 07 Oct 2006 Source: Union Leader (Manchester, NH) Copyright: 2006 The Union Leader Corp. Contact: http://www.theunionleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/761 Note: Out-of-state e-mail letters are seldom published. Author: Paula Tracy Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) DRUG COURT IS COMING SOON TO GRAFTON COUNTY Plymouth - Community leaders from the Upper Valley and throughout Grafton County heard how a drug court could make a difference in turning around the lives of drug addicts, their families and citizens who are victimized by drug-related crimes. "With this we have a good chance to change the paradigm so we don't see as much recidivism," said Grafton County Superior Court Judge Jean Burling, who attended a luncheon yesterday and heard from a New Jersey prosecutor and a drug defendant whose life was changed by the Orange County drug court program. Burling attended a training seminar in St. Louis in August with seven other members of a Grafton County team who are working to develop a drug court in North Haverhill by 2007. A similar program was begun in Strafford County this spring. There would be intensive, and intrusive judicial oversight, with drug testing three times a week for three months, counselling and meeting weekly with a judge and a coordinator to go over progress. That judge and coordinator would know the participant well. Those involved in the drug court would be required to show a weekly pay stub to prove they are working, to attend counseling and after time, would be rewarded with more freedom once they prove they are clean and productive. Already, the county of 85,000 residents has set aside $52,000 over two years as seed money for the drug court. Efforts are underway to obtain grant money from the federal government to help pay for the intensive treatment, which Grafton County Attorney Rick St. Hilaire believes will over time reduce the problems of drugs, particularly the problem of heroin in the Lebanon area. The first step to eligibility for federal money was the task force attending the seminar in St. Louis. The county was chosen among 40 others in the nation to attend. The idea for the Grafton County drug court came after Bill Sahlman of Energy Shield Century 21 in Lebanon began to work on a house for Bob Gasser, an Orange County, N.J., prosecutor who was planning to retire to the Upper Valley. Gasser told Sahlman of his work and what a wonderful experience it was to see people's lives change. Sahlman contacted St. Hilaire and began to discuss the idea of a drug court here. Yesterday at the Common Man Inn, Gasser and one of the men he prosecuted, Vincent Reeves, 36, spoke to law enforcement officials, state elected leaders, and Grafton County community leaders about how the program worked. "It was the intense supervision, that's what worked for me," said Reeves, who had a $100 a day heroin habit that was destroying his life. He said he had two consecutive two-year sentences over his head when he went to the drug court. He qualified because he was a non-violent, non-sexual offender who was addicted. After a 30-day inpatient treatment program, he showed up three times a week for drug testing and met weekly with a judge and Gasser, the prosecutor, to go over where he was headed. He said he is now three years clean and has an 11-month-old baby. "It's an unbelievable program," he said. Attending the luncheon were police chiefs or top officials from Lebanon, Plymouth, Canaan, Ashland, Lincoln and Bristol along with Anne Rice of the state Attorney General's Office and District 1 Executive Councilor Ray Burton. Also present were members of the task force working on the plan, including Sahlman, Grafton County Commission Chairman Mike Cryans, Judge Burling, Superintendent of the Grafton County House of Correction Glenn Libby, Gasser, defense attorney Gary Apfel, treatment specialist Greg Norman, Grafton County Superior Court Clerk Bob Muh, Lebanon Police Chief Jim Alexander, and St. Hilaire. After the presentation, Judge Burling was asked how the program might work in the court. She said one thing that needs to be worked out is getting quick drug testing results so when participants come for weekly sessions with her, she can get a drug test result on the spot. Currently those results take several weeks. There are other logistics, but Burling said such a court is crucial to reduce the "scourge" that plagues the community, not just from the addicted person's perspective, but those who are preyed upon to support the habit. "We'll just do it because it is a priority," Burling said. St. Hilaire said he hopes to have the drug court up and running by the spring of 2007. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman