Pubdate: Sat, 28 Mar 2015 Source: News Herald (Willoughby, OH) Copyright: 2015 The News-Herald Contact: http://www.news-herald.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/305 Author: Matt Skrajner MENTOR DRUG COURT EXPANDS TO REST OF LAKE COUNTY "I can't say 'hell yes,' can I?" Mentor Municipal Court Judge John Trebets answered when asked if all the extra work was worth it. On March 9, the city's drug court expanded and is now the Lake County Drug Court, extending its alternatives to incarceration to the entire county. Mentor's drug court began in April 2010 and has helped dozens of low level, non-violent drug offenders get back on the road to recovery. "We can only help those that want to help themselves," Trebets said of the voluntary nature of the program. If someone else was also a victim in the original offense, that victim is consulted before participation in drug court is an option, the judge said. While each treatment path is different for each client, Trebets said typically drug court is an 18- to 24-month commitment, has more intense supervision than ordinary probation, has random drug testing and more frequent court appearances. Only certain people are ale to utilize the drug court: no drug traffickers or those with child or sex offenses can enter the program, he said. Occasionally, periods of incarceration are used in tandem with the drug court. "We can make sure there's a drying out period where there's no drug or alcohol," Trebets said. "And then we can look at the rehabilitation after that." Trebets and his court staff sought help from numerous area organizations when developing the program, including the Lake County Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services board, Lake-Geauga Recovery Centers and the Lake County Sheriff's Office. Kim Fraser, executive director of the ADAMHS board, said drug courts are a great way for people who have made mistakes but truly want help, to get back on the right track. "It creates a healthy community," Fraser said. She added that Trebets was a great person to be able to lead the drug court, as he's a "fierce advocate" for residents without being naive. "Nobody's pulling the wool over Judge Trebets's eyes," she said. Fraser also said the expansion of the drug court to cover the entire county was critical in battling the spread of heroin and opiates in the area. "They know no geographic bounds, they know no socio-economic bounds," she said. As Trebets explained, drug traffickers often sell heroin on the cheap to get users hooked. The habit is then extremely difficult to break. "After the first time, they don't get the high any more," Trebets said. "They just need it to feel normal." The first drug court was established in 1989 in Miami-Dade County in Florida. Since then, more than 2,500 such courts have been established nationwide and are either operating or are planned in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Guam and Puerto Rico, according to the Office of National Drug Control Policy. Studies have shown that drug courts are often a less expensive and more effective way to treat those with addiction problems when compared to incarceration. Drug courts saved governments an average of between $5,680 and $6,208 per participant when compared due in large part to less recidivism. Just 29 percent of drug court participants tested positive for drugs within 18 months, as opposed to 46 percent of comparable offenders in traditional court settings, according to the National Institute of Justice. Additionally, the study found that 52 percent of drug court participants were rearrested compared to 62 percent of those in normal court settings. The drop in recidivism is important, as drug offenders are filling up prisons nationwide. As of Feb. 21, 96,036 inmates in the federal prison system are incarcerated due to drug crimes, which accounts for 48.7 percent of total inmates, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons. The next closest offense was weapons, explosives and arson at 31,631, or 16 percent. Lake County Sheriff Daniel Dunlap has worked closely with Trebets since the founding of the county's Mental Health Court in 2004, which Trebets also operates. "The guy is a glutton for punishment," Dunlap joked. Trebets and his staff do not get paid any additional money for running the drug and mental health courts. But Dunlap is glad Trebets does the work because there is no easy answer to helping those with drug and alcohol addiction. "It takes a concerted effort from multiple angles," he said. "(The drug court) is good for everybody." Much of that extra work came when applying for the certification for expansion of the drug court from the Ohio Supreme Court. "It was a tedious task," Trebets said. "But it made us cross our T's and dot our I's and become even more efficient and effective." The certification process involves an application, multiple reviews by the Supreme Court's Specialized Dockets staff and a site visit. "We give the community their sons, their daughters, their husbands, their wives and their children back to be healthy and productive," Trebets said. The judge recently received a letter from a past drug court graduate that included two pictures: one of the woman when she was arrested and one of her today. "It was like night and day," he said. "Those are the things that keep us going... When we get those wins, we cherish them." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt