Pubdate: Sat, 10 Oct 1998 Source: New Haven Register (CT) Copyright: 1998, New Haven Register Contact: http://www.ctcentral.com/cgi-bin/w3com/start?ctcentral+FrontPage Author: Randall Beach UNOPPOSED INCUMBENT HAS MISSION NEW HAVEN - Democratic state Rep. John Martinez, who is running unopposed for a third term, feels "a sense of mission" in continuing his work on alternatives to prison sentences for non-violent offenders. Martinez, 44, an Arch Street resident whose 95th House District includes the Hill, Wooster Square and parts of Grand Avenue and State Street, was profoundly affected by his work with drug addicts when he was project director for the Hill Health Center/Grant Street Partnership. He doesn't think such people belong in prison. Martinez' first major piece of legislation was creating a drug court, now based at the Elm Street courthouse in New Haven, to steer non-violent drug offenders toward treatment programs and counseling rather than prisons. A second such court subsequently began operating in Bridgeport. Encouraged by the drug court's success in combating overcrowding in prisons, Martinez then introduced a bill to open a community court in Hartford to handle defendants charged with misdemeanors, such as prostitution. After it opens and proves its worth, he feels similar community courts will be created in New Haven and elsewhere. Although he believes we should remain tough on violent criminals, Martinez said he wants all of the state's courts to be more "consumer friendly." "The community at large should not be afraid of entering a courthouse," he noted. During the next legislative session, Martinez will take on other legal issues, such as crafting a bill that would prohibit "profiling" by local police departments. The town of Trumbull recently came under fire when a police department memo surfaced instructing patrolmen to be on the lookout for people who did not fit that town's "profile," which is overwhelmingly white. Martinez would also like to amend mandatory sentencing laws, which he said have tied judges' hands. He said greater flexibility would allow non-violent drug users to be placed in drug treatment centers rather than in prisons. Martinez hopes his legal initiatives will have the overall effect of reducing the disproportionately high percentage of African-Americans and Hispanics in prison. He said 73 percent of Connecticut's prison inmates are people of color. "I believe the system can be changed," said Martinez, who is the son of a Pentecostal minister. "But my style is not to confront people. Show them the problem, sit down with them and try to come up with a solution." - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry