Pubdate: Sat, 19 Dec 2015 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2015 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://services.bostonglobe.com/news/opeds/letter.aspx?id=6340 Website: http://bostonglobe.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 TREATMENT INSTEAD OF JAIL FOR ADDICTS This fall,a new kind of court session came to order in Massachusetts, one that holds enormous promise for a region coping with an exploding opioid epidemic by offering integrated treatment for low-level drug defendants rather than costly long-term incarceration. The program, called RISE - for Repair, Invest, Succeed, Emerge - is part of a broader shift nationally away from rigid sentencing guidelines to a more humane view: dealing with the complex social causes that can lead to drug abuse and drug-related crime in an effort to break the addiction cycle and keep people from re-offending. "This offers an opportunity . . . to help defendants turn their lives around," US District Judge Leo T. Sorokin told the Globe's Milton Valencia. "We are trying to make sure defendants never come back to the criminal justice system, and that when they return to their neighborhoods they return as sober, employed, and law-abiding citizens." Defendants are offered a chance to avoid or reduce their time behind bars by pleading guilty - and working with a network of agencies to get their lives back on track. In a recent case, a mother of five, who was hauled into court for helping a drug dealer launder money, agreed to find better child care and stable housing, to work toward obtaining a GED, and to maintain a job. Her progress will be monitored by court officials for a year. If successful, RISE participants might be offered alternatives to prison, such as probation or home confinement - or a sentence might be dismissed entirely. Certainly, there are some important caveats - and close partnership between the prosecution, defense attorneys, probation officers, and judges is crucial to the program's success. So is the kind of up-close-and-personal attention that will make sure defendants work toward their ultimate goals for setting their lives on a better path. As the Globe reported, victims of crime are allowed to participate at their own discretion - and asking defendants to take responsibility for the impact of their misdeeds certainly seems like a logical first step in the rehabilitation process. The program also should exclude anyone accused of serious violent crime or crimes involving exploitation of a child - or high-level white collar crimes that can't be tied to a history of drug abuse or a disadvantaged background. Court officials hope to serve 20 defendants in the first year and then will reassess. Although states have had marked success with drug courts since then-prosecutor Janet Reno launched the first one in Miami in 1990, a Huffington Post investigation earlier this year found that some states were wavering in their commitment. Kentucky courts forced addicts into abstinence-only programs, the investigation found, depriving them of medications like Suboxone, a semi-synthetic opioid drug that stops cravings. The Obama administration rightly cracked down, announcing that state drug courts that receive federal funding will not be allowed to ban medications. The federal government should not back down. If anything, the RISE program in US District Court in Massachusetts should serve as a national example and shows that partnerships between the criminal justice system and social service agencies can be a potent weapon in combatting the opioid epidemic. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom