Pubdate: Wed, 13 Apr 2016 Source: Portage Daily Register (WI) Copyright: 2016 Portage Daily Register Contact: http://www.wiscnews.com/speakup/form.php?pub=pdr Website: http://www.wiscnews.com/pdr/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3779 Author: Jonathan Stefonek Note: MAP archives articles exactly as published, except that our editors may redact the names and addresses of accused persons who have not been convicted of a crime, if those named are not otherwise public figures or officials. IN SENTENCING, JUDGE INSISTENT DRUG COURT NEEDED A sentencing hearing for a Portage woman charged with reckless homicide overflowed with emotional testimony, culminating in a decision in which the judge lamented the court being ill-equipped to deal with such cases in the absence of a drug treatment court. [name1 redacted], 27, of Portage, was accused of first-degree reckless homicide as a party to a crime in connection with the August death of [name2 redacted], 27, of Lodi. The Columbia County Sheriff's Office responded Aug. 18 to a Lodi-area home for a death investigation. According to court documents, the man last with [name2 redacted], [name3 redacted], 26, of Madison, told officers that he had been sitting at a campfire with [name2 redacted] the night before and they had gotten the idea to get some heroin. At 1 a.m. the two were able to get money and a ride to Madison where they were dropped off at the parking lot for Woodman's Food Market. A half hour later they came back and returned to the Lodi home around 3 a.m. [name3 redacted] told a Columbia County detective that after getting to Woodman's Food Market, the two found [name4 redacted], 27, whom they had been texting earlier and was waiting with his minivan. Also in the van was [name5 redacted], 46, of Tampa Bay, Florida, and [name4 redacted]'s girlfriend, [name1 redacted]. They then drove to a PDQ station where [name3 redacted], [name4 redacted] and [name2 redacted] waited while [name1 redacted] and [name5 redacted] left with $200 from [name2 redacted]. The two came back with heroin and all five took heroin together before [name2 redacted] and [name3 redacted] left the van to get their ride back home, bringing heroin from their trip. That morning, [name3 redacted] told the detective, he and [name2 redacted] went to the boat house, where they shot up again. Later, [name3 redacted] woke up and went home. [name2 redacted] never woke up. During [name1 redacted]' hearing, Assistant District Attorney Crystal Long told Judge Todd Hepler that there were five people who would like to speak in court and another who, expecting to be too emotional to address the court, asked Long to read her statement. "I feel incomplete," [name2 redacted]'s father said. "Living in a world without him isn't right." [name2 redacted]'s mother gave photos to Hepler to be taken into consideration, telling the court that [name2 redacted] was the youngest of her five children, "taken, used and left for dead," referring to [name1 redacted] and the others involved as "those who profited from his death." After the family provided its testimony, Long re-iterated that the proposed sentencing agreement was put together, among other reasons, to ensure testimony from [name1 redacted] in convicting those more directly responsible in [name2 redacted]'s death. The reckless homicide charge was dismissed while [name1 redacted] plead no contest to delivery of heroin. [name1 redacted]' family was also there, her mother standing up to speak on her behalf. "I feel horrible that they lost their child and that my child was involved in that," said [name1 redacted]'s mother, "and I just pray that heroin doesn't take my child as well." "[name2 redacted] was my friend and my heart breaks for the family that suffers from this unfortunate loss," [name1 redacted] told the court, speaking last on her own behalf. "I hope you will understand the remorse and heartbreak that has constantly been in my heart since learning of [name2 redacted]'s passing." "If we continue doing the same old things, we will continue getting the same old results and that is simply unacceptable," said Hepler "I cannot sit idly by and watch children throw their lives away without trying to do something about it. "To that end I have committed myself to the establishment of a drug court in Columbia County. We need to do something and we need to do it now." In the absence of such a mechanism, Hepler sentenced [name1 redacted], who arrived from Columbia County Jail, where she has spent 189 days, to another 14 days, followed by seven years of probation with a requirement that every six months she return to give Hepler an update on her progress. Later in the day Hepler explained his expansive decision in [name1 redacted]'s case. 'Huge need' "There's a huge need for a judge to do something about this," saying that Judge Andrew Voigt has been occupied with building and moving projects and Judge Alan White is busy overseeing the OWI treatment court. "Honestly, I wanted to wait a little more, but we would be foolish not to push forward." Putting a stack of papers down on his desk with a whomp he showed some of his recent homework - PowerPoint presentations for a drug treatment class, academic studies, policies and procedures from counties with drug courts like Dane and Sauk Counties. One avenue for getting the resources for a drug court is through a Treatment, Alternatives and Diversion grant through the state, although if successfully applied for in the current round, that would mean funding in 2017. Having gone between the Columbia County Sheriff's Office, the Office of Probation and Parole, Health and Human Services and other parties with a stake in expanding treatment, Hepler is developing an idea of what he would like to see happen in Columbia County. "We need to bring these services together for a more holistic solution," giving an example of helping people to find daycare so they can get to court and treatment, while still being parents. "Nobody wins in these things," he said. "That family is trying to deal with all this pain, and at the same time it could have easily been the other way and he would have been the one in court today." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D