Pubdate: Thur, 07 Oct 1999 Source: New York Law Journal (NY) Copyright: 1999 NLP IP Company Contact: 345 Park Avenue South, New York, NY 10010 Fax: (212) 696-4287 Feedback: http://www.nylj.com/contact.html Website: http://www.nylj.com/ Author: Daniel Wise CHIEF JUDGE APPOINTS PANEL TO REVIEW HANDLING OF DRUG CASES In outlining the state court system's priorities at the start of the new millennium, Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye announced yesterday the appointment of a commission to examine how to better handle drug cases. Judge Kaye also said the court system's top priorities are gaining more flexibility in sentencing addicts and drug dealers and increasing the compensation rates for court-appointed counsel in criminal cases. She also spoke of a need to cast the courts and judges in "problem solving" roles, and simplify New York's trial courts by consolidating nine courts into two. First heard in the spring, Judge Kaye's call for appellate court discretion to reduce the harshest aspects of the so-called Rockefeller drug laws gained a public endorsement from the Law Enforcement Council at a breakfast meeting. Judge Kaye's speech, delivered yesterday at the breakfast meeting of the Citizens' Crime Commission, was attended by a number of prosecutors and judges, including Manhattan District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau, Brooklyn District Attorney Charles J. Hynes, Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown and Chief Administrative Judge Jonathan Lippman. In announcing the formation of a new commission to examine the court's response to drug cases, Judge Kaye observed that drugs "at the end of the 20th century" are "the driving force in our criminal justice system." About 75 percent of all persons arrested in New York City test positive for drugs, and over half of all felony indictments involve drug offenses, she pointed out. The new commission, headed by a former U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Robert B. Fiske Jr., will have an explicit mandate to explore ways of adding new Drug Treatment Courts to the staple of 15 such courts in operation. Sentencing in these courts is held in abeyance as long as a defendant successfully attends a treatment program. Judge Kaye called the "problem-solving" approach used by the Drug Treatment Courts critical to ending the "revolving-door" syndrome in which drug addicts "cycle and recycle through our courts." Similar approaches have been successfully used in dealing with domestic violence and quality of life crimes, she said. This new approach has taken judges out of their role as "passive umpires" and turned them into "active participants in solving problems," Judge Kaye said. It has also involved the courts with the other branches of government to "insure that the 'system' as a whole functions as well as it can." Manhattan Executive Assistant District Attorney Kristine Hamann, the Law Enforcement Council's coordinator, announced the group's backing for Judge Kaye's concept of giving the Appellate Division discretion to mitigate unduly harsh sentences under the Rockefeller drug laws, which mandate minimum sentences of 15 years to life for persons convicted of selling more than two ounces of narcotics or possessing more than four ounces. Furthermore, Judge Kaye said raises in the pay rates for court-appointed lawyers is at the "top of the list of challenges for the new millennium." She said the current rates $40 an hour for in-court work and $25 out of court are "ridiculous" and force the courts into "a churning mode" occasioned by delays as "fewer lawyers juggle more cases." - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto