Pubdate: Mon, 8 Feb 1999 Source: Wire: Associated Press Copyright: 1999 Associated Press AUSTRALIA'S FIRST DRUG COURT OPENS TODAY AUSTRALIA'S first drug court will open in Sydney today. The court, pioneered in the United States, offers heroin-addicted criminals the option of undergoing rehabilitation instead of going to jail. NSW Premier Bob Carr said addicts' progress would be strictly monitored and if they returned to drugs, they would be jailed. "It's an incentive to get off drugs," he said. "It's an example of the new solutions we're trying." The $12 million, two-year trial at the west suburban Parramatta court house will be headed by District Court judge Gay Murrell, assisted by health and legal specialists. Drug courts are well established in the US and studies have found up to 85 per cent of addicts complete the rehabilitation program and recidivism has been reduced by up to 80 per cent. Under the NSW trial, only heroin addicts guilty of non-violent crimes such as minor drug dealing or theft will be eligible to appear before the drug court. If addicts plead guilty they get the choice of undergoing a 12-month rehabilitation program or jail. If they choose rehabilitation, their sentence is suspended and they appear before the court weekly, undergoing random drug testing and having their jail sentence reinstated for breaching conditions. The scheme will be trialed at Parramatta but could be extended to other areas of NSW if it proves successful. About 70 per cent of prisoners in NSW were in jail because of drug-related crimes and drug courts could significantly reduce the prison population, the government says. The opposition has said the trial is doomed because NSW does not have the rehabilitation services to deal with addicts referred by drug courts. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady