Pubdate: Fri, 20 Nov 2015 Source: Albuquerque Journal (NM) Column: Judge for Yourself Copyright: 2015 Albuquerque Journal Contact: http://www.abqjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/10 Author: Daniel E. Ramczyk DIFFICULT CHOICES WHEN A JUDGE FACES ADDICTED CRIMINALS If Substance Abuse Is Not Treated, the Criminal Behavior Will Continue What is my responsibility as a judge when a criminal defendant is suffering from alcohol or drug addiction? In April 2003, I swore to uphold the United States Constitution, and to enforce the constitution and laws of New Mexico. How and when does court-ordered treatment for addiction fit into my judicial duties? Addiction and crime are related. The National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence reports that, every day, 36 people die and approximately 700 are injured in motor vehicle crashes that involve an alcohol-impaired driver. The Council also reports that 80 percent of prison inmates abuse alcohol or drugs. Nearly 50 percent are clinically addicted. And according to the Department of Justice, 37 percent of almost 2 million convicted offenders currently in jail report that they were drinking at the time of their arrest. Some believe that judicial involvement in treatment for addiction is highly effective because the judge wields a heavy hammer - i.e., jail - - over the defendant. Sometimes, though, the addict is perfectly willing to serve his time so that he can get back into the bottle or back to the needle without the hassle of probation and judicial oversight. One thing is clear, however. If addiction and substance abuse are not treated, the criminal behavior will continue. The Bernalillo County Metropolitan Court offers a DWI/Drug Court. I have had the honor of serving on this court twice in the past. The team of judges, court staff and service providers all are dedicated to reducing the recidivism of chronic drunken drivers. The court is very effective. But it also is specially funded and can accept only a limited number of defendants. And many defendants do not want to participate in such an intense program. So, as a trial judge without the backup of a DWI/Drug Court program, how should I deal with a chronic alcoholic or drug addict while trying to carry out my more traditional judicial duties? It is not easy. When I arraign a habitual criminal defendant with a history of chronic alcoholism or drug addiction, I must set conditions of release. Do I keep a chronic drunken driver or drug addict in jail pending trial, or do I release the defendant, for example, on his assurance that he will seek treatment? Is he being sincere? Will he actually go to treatment? If he abandons treatment, who will let me know? How will we find him? Will he commit another alcohol-or drug-related crime? Treatment clearly is preferable to incarceration, but the safety of the community is no less important. When I set a matter for trial, should I vacate the trial setting because the defendant has checked himself into a treatment program? Will the delay result in lost or destroyed evidence? Will witnesses become unavailable? What about the state's right to a speedy trial? What is more important, a speedy trial or immediate treatment of the defendant for substance abuse? At sentencing, should I be more lenient with a defendant because he has attended 12-step recovery meetings while his case was pending? Or because he has sought treatment? Should he be sentenced the same as any other defendant? Will it be safe to release him to probation instead of imposing jail? Did the defendant seek treatment because he had a desire for sobriety or because he thought it would make him look repentant in court? And what of the requests from families of alcoholics and addicts? Families destroyed by alcoholism or drug addiction often will seek assistance from the courts. Families sometimes plead with judges to mandate treatment and/ or incarceration before a defendant has even been convicted of any crime. Or, conversely, some families will assure a judge that they can "keep an eye" on the chronic alcoholic or addict, convicted yet again, if only the judge will release him from jail. These are difficult issues. We all want the suffering addict to receive treatment. He or she will have a much better life and our community will be safer. At the same time, a judge should not endanger the community or unwittingly enable an alcoholic or addict by ordering treatment when incarceration is appropriate. It all comes down to the addict's desire to get clean and sober. Without that desire, nothing anyone says or does will have much effect, if any, on the addict's behavior. And that desire necessarily must be determined by a judge in an individual case-by-case approach. In reality, treatment for addiction is a phone call away. Anyone may call the AA Central Office here in New Mexico at (505) 2661900. Volunteers who answer the phone can direct an alcoholic or addict to all sorts of resources to combat substance abuse. Albuquerque, alone, has numerous treatment centers and programs. Twelve-step recovery meetings are held around town all day, every day. If someone wants to get clean and sober in Albuquerque, the help is here. Clearly, treatment for substance abuse should be part of my approach as a judge in the criminal cases assigned to me. But how and when to do it is a very complicated matter. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom