Pubdate: Fri, 14 Jul 2006 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Page: A3 Copyright: 2006 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 Note: Does not publish letters from outside its circulation area. Author: Laura Mecoy Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) COURT HALTS NEW LAW ON DRUG TERMS Judge Says Lawsuit By Prop. 36 Backers Is Likely To Succeed. An Alameda County judge on Thursday blocked implementation of a new law allowing judges to issue short-term jail sentences to drug offenders who fail to complete court-ordered treatment programs. Superior Court Judge Winifred Smith said opponents of the new law had a "substantial likelihood of success" in the lawsuit they filed to overturn the law enacted with the governor's signature on Senate Bill 1137. "Plaintiffs have demonstrated that serious irreparable harm will occur" without a temporary restraining order, the judge ruled. Daniel Abrahamson, one of the attorneys challenging the new law, called the order "one big step in striking down" the law. "Jail sanctions will not be an option," he said. "If we find or hear about any jail sanctions, we will be back in court immediately seeking an order of contempt." Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed SB 1137 into law on Wednesday. The measure sought to rewrite the voter-approved initiative, Proposition 36, which requires treatment instead of jail for nonviolent drug offenders. SB 1137 allowed judges to sentence drug offenders who relapse or fail to attend treatment programs to two to five days in jail or up to 10 days in jail detoxification programs. Sen. Denise Ducheny, D-San Diego, wrote the bill in hopes of getting more addicts into treatment. Currently, about three out of every four offenders sentenced to treatment under Proposition 36 fail to show up for their court-ordered programs or never complete them. A task force of prosecutors, judges, public defenders and treatment program providers backed the bill, saying short-term jail sentences would prod recalcitrant drug offenders to either enter or return to treatment. But Proposition 36's backers opposed jail sanctions and sued to block the bill. The Drug Policy Alliance and the California Society of Addiction Medicine claimed only the voters could make substantive changes in the initiative. Anticipating a legal challenge, Ducheny inserted language in the bill putting the matter to a vote of the people if the court strikes down the law, but Abrahamson on Thursday suggested that move will not hold up in court. In a statement issued Thursday, the governor's legal affairs secretary, Andrea Lynn Hoch, said Schwarzenegger will defend the legislation. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom