Pubdate: Sun, 03 Feb 2008 Source: Capital, The (MD) Copyright: 2008, The Capital Contact: http://www.capitalonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1004 Authors: Lisa Beisel and Scott Daugherty Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) 25 STRIKES AND NARY A HARSH SENTENCE Man's Rap Sheet Illustrates System's Revolving Door When city police caught Ronald Wilson running in a back alley last month shortly after a burglary at a West Street liquor store, they knew very well who they were cuffing. The 46-year-old Parole Street resident has been arrested at least 40 times and has 25 convictions on his record for crimes ranging from theft to drug possession to resisting arrest. But police say no matter what they arrest him for, judges give him lenient sentences or order him to drug treatment - ultimately putting him back on the streets in a few months. Officer Hal Dalton, a city police spokesman, said the state's judicial system is ill-equipped to handle nonviolent criminals like Wilson. "They've been in and out of the system, and nothing seems to work. I think we'd be better served if these people were just removed from society," Officer Dalton said. At the time of his arrest Jan. 22, his fourth charge in three months, Wilson was enrolled in the Circuit Court's Adult Drug Treatment Court Program - a closely supervised form of probation for people addicted to drugs and convicted of nonviolent crimes. Wilson was last released from prison in February 2006 and admitted into rehab, but he washed out by the end of the year. Circuit Court Judge Michael E. Loney, who supervises the drug court, declined to comment about Wilson directly, noting that the man is scheduled to appear in front of him Feb. 15 regarding possible expulsion from the program. If convicted of violating his probation, Wilson faces more than eight years in prison. Speaking in general terms, Judge Loney said drug court and court-ordered drug rehabilitation are better at stemming crime than long prison sentences since they address the root of the problem: drugs. "They are basically coerced into doing what is right for them," he said, explaining that drug court involves a lot of supervision and counselling under threat of prison. Judge Loney added he and his staff try to screen applicants to make sure only defendants truly interested in cleaning up their lives are admitted to drug court, but he admitted some slip through the cracks. "We won't know unless we try," he said. "We can't give up on everyone." Non-Violent History Wilson currently is behind bars at the Jennifer Road Detention Center, charged with the attempted burglary at Gritz's Liquor and three other thefts in the city. He is being held without bond. Those charges, however, are just the latest in a string of arrests and convictions dating back to the 1980s and part of a lengthy criminal history broken up by almost annual stints in the county jail. Wilson is not a violent criminal, or even a particularly good one. Like thousands of other drug addicts determined to feed their addictions any way they can, Wilson would walk into a store or break into a building, grab something he could easily carry and run away. Despite all of the convictions, Wilson has never spent more than two years behind bars. State's Attorney Frank R. Weathersbee explained misdemeanor crimes carry light sentences. Misdemeanor theft, for example, has a maximum sentence of 18 months. Sentences are weakened when judges order repeat offenders to serve multiple sentences for separate convictions concurrently - at the same time - rather than consecutively - one after another. For example, Wilson was convicted of five crimes in three months in 1997: two misdemeanor thefts, one misdemeanor burglary, one drug possession and one false statement to a police officer. Each conviction resulted in jail sentences ranging from 6 months to two years, but the judges allowed Wilson to serve all five sentences at the same time. He was back on the streets and in trouble with the law in January 1999, charged with a burglary at a muffler shop on West Street. District Court Judge Robert C. Wilcox said he doesn't like concurrent sentences, but said they sometimes are necessary. He explained that anyone sentenced to more than 18 months behind bars goes to a state prison. But when the state runs short on beds for murderers and rapists, he said, the Department of Corrections is allowed to place some inmates on house arrest. Judge Wilcox said that means a petty thief sentenced to 18 months at the county jail might actually spend more time behind bars than one sentenced to 10 years at a prison. "He's the first candidate they are going to set loose," he said. Still, Mr. Weatherbee said judges should put defendants with long criminal histories away for as long as possible. "The only way to stop the guy is to give him the maximum allowed under the law," he said. The burglary of a shed and theft of a $150 mitre saw in January 2004 netted Wilson his harshest sentence. As part of a negotiated plea agreement, Circuit Court Judge Paul A. Hackner sentenced Wilson in April of that year to 10 years in prison. He suspended all but five years. But Wilson's own drug addiction proved to be his "get out of jail free" card less than two years later. "Recently my addiction has escillated (sic) to a level where I stole from my family and close friends..." he wrote in one letter, dated Jan. 13, 2005. It was one of dozens of letters he wrote the court over the years, asking judges for leniency, work release and shortened sentences. In Feb. 2006, just 21 months after sending him to prison, Judge Hackner suspended the balance of the sentence and let Wilson go to rehab. Circuit Court Judge Michele D. Jaklitsch also suspended a consecutive 15-month sentence she handed down in Aug. 2004 so Mr. Wilson could enroll in the Second Genesis program in Crownsville. Wilson washed out of rehab within the year, testing positive for cocaine during his final days in the program. Trials, Rehabilitation Lucy Lowenthal, director of development for Second Genesis, said Wilson's case exemplifies a key weakness in court-ordered drug treatment: the person has to want to do it. "You have to work. You have to be committed," she said, acknowledging some people just choose rehab because it involves nicer rooms and better food than prison. But, Ms. Lowenthal said, few drug addicts want to live that life and most are eager to kick the habit if they get some help. "It's a gift for them to come to us," she said, claiming only 10 to 15 percent of the people who come to Second Genesis wash out. "I'd say it works for 85 percent of the people in our program." Officer Dalton said Annapolis has 10 to 12 people that are in and out of jail like Mr. Wilson. "They've been in programs. It's not for lack of trying...," he said. "I don't know what the answer is, some individuals don't take to treatment, or maybe they just don't want the treatment." Russell Butler, executive director of Maryland Crime Victims Resource Center, said his group thinks treatment and rehabilitation is important but "at some point, you need to protect society." "We shouldn't give up on people, but we do have to realize that there are some people not amenable to treatment," he said. 'No more excuses' Even judges admit the system isn't perfect and that some defendants get too many second chances. "I get sick when I see these guys coming through again and again," said Judge Robert Wilcox, noting one bail review Thursday where the man had 47 prior convictions. "Everybody deserves a chance, ... (but) it gets to a point where enough is enough. You are costing society too much money." Judge Hackner himself expressed those same concerns to Wilson in March 2007. While he had just washed out of rehab, Wilson told the judge he wanted to put crime and drugs behind him. "It's not going to be behind you. You're going to get back out and you are going to get back into drugs," Judge Hackner said during the hearing. "I'm not a magician. There is a point where I should get myself a big red stamp that says 'No more excuses.'... If I had that stamp I'd put it on your file.'" - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake