Pubdate: Wed, 20 Oct 1999 Source: Examiner, The (Ireland) Copyright: Examiner Publications Ltd, 1999 Contact: http://www.examiner.ie/ Author: John Murphy JUDGE CRITICISES LEGAL AID FOR DRUG PEDDLERS A District Court Judge who assigned the services of a solicitor under the free legal aid scheme to a self confessed drugs peddler, said it is outrageous that ordinary hard working taxpayers should have to pay for the legal defence of such people. Judge Michael Pattwell said that while the free legal aid scheme is a necessity there is too much by way of a "handout'' to people under the scheme which the ordinary taxpayers have to pay for. "It is outrageous that a man who is admitting to peddling drugs and who has been earning pounds 150 a week, stands in front of me and asks me to make an order granting him free legal aid that ordinary workers must pay for,'' Judge Pattwell said. "Something is going to have to be done whereby a court can make these people, and especially drug peddlers, pay back what the court has spent on them in the granting of legal aid." Judge Pattwell, speaking at Midleton District Court yesterday when 20 year old Patrick Rolston appeared before him on drugs charges, cited several categories of ordinary workers whose income tax goes to finance the legal defence of people like the accused. Mr Rolston made application for free legal aid and told the court that while he had been earning pounds 150 a week he is now unemployed and has no savings. He pleaded guilty to the unlawful possession of amphetamine tablets for the supply or sale to others. Garda Sgt. Bill Daly told the court Mr Rolston was found to have 97 amphetamine tablets with a street value of about pounds 1,000 in his anorak. Judge Pattwell said: "He [Rolston] was out to make money on the misery of others''. The Judge congratulated Sgt. Daly on his excellent police work that led to Rolston being "taken out of circulation''. He also praised the "civic mindedness" of the people who tipped off the police. He jailed Mr Rolston for four months and fixed recognisance in the defendant's own bond of pounds 250 and an independent surety of pounds 2,000 in the event of an appeal. - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto