Pubdate: Tue, 19 Dec 2006 Source: Post-Star, The (NY) Page: A1, top left column, above the fold Copyright: 2006 Glens Falls Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.poststar.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1068 Author: Don Lehman MUSICIAN MAY FACE FELONY CHARGES Washington County DA Says Charges Still A Possibility For Anastasio Washington County District Attorney Kevin Kortright said Monday he has not ruled out filing a felony drug charge against a world- renowned musician arrested Friday in Whitehall. Kortright said he wanted to review the State Police crime laboratory report on the drugs Ernest "Trey" Anastasio allegedly possessed at the time of his arrest, results of a urine sample and the rest of the evidence Whitehall Police assembled. "We're going to take a look at it all and make a decision from there," the district attorney said. Anastasio, 42, of Richmond, Vt., is the former frontman of Phish, a hugely popular jam band that broke up two years ago. He was arrested in Whitehall about 3:30 a.m. Friday on misdemeanor charges he drove under the influence of drugs, illegally possessed 60 prescription painkillers and an antianxiety drug and drove with a suspended license. He was on his way to Vermont at the time. The pills were in a bottle that had the name of a New York City man on the prescription sticker. Police said Anastasio told them he had smoked hashish and taken pills before he was stopped for crossing over the center line on Poultney Street. Whitehall Police Chief Richard LaChapelle acknowledged that amount of pills could lead to a felony drug possession charge, but said his office decided to file the misdemeanor possession charge and allow Kortright to decide whether a felony was warranted instead. "I don't like to overcharge people," he said. "Some people would have charged him with that (a felony). But I hate taking a case and having it (the charge) reduced or thrown out." LaChapelle said Anastasio told police he knew he had "a problem" and that he hoped to take care of it. Anastasio released an apology late Friday. "He was most concerned about how this was going to affect his involvement with a youth orchestra in Vermont," LaChapelle said. New York courts have drug court programs to assist those with drug problems, but because Anastasio is a resident of Vermont, he would not qualify for it unless he moved to New York, Kortright said. Should Anastasio be convicted, LaChapelle said he'd like to see him sentenced to some type of community service that could assist the area. "They should make him do something around here. How about a free concert in Whitehall?" he said with a laugh. Meanwhile, LaChapelle said the media and Phish-fan frenzy that began when news of the arrest got out Friday morning continued into the weekend. LaChapelle said Court TV and a number of national news organizations contacted his office. And on Saturday, a Phish fan from the Albany area made a trip to the Whitehall Police Department, telling officers he wanted to see where the arrest happened and meet the officers involved, the chief said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl