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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Early Start - Treatment, Not Jail, In Drug Cases
Title:US CA: Early Start - Treatment, Not Jail, In Drug Cases
Published On:2001-04-17
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-01 12:40:15
EARLY START: TREATMENT, NOT JAIL, IN DRUG CASES

As officials throughout the state scramble for the July launch of a
voter-mandated program requiring treatment for many drug offenders, Orange
County says it is already prepared for the massive undertaking.

Courtrooms in Santa Ana and Fullerton are sending some drug offenders to
counseling more than two months before the changes required under
Proposition 36 take effect, officials said.

One reason for the early launch is to avoid inundating treatment programs
with offenders in July. Also, many attorneys are seeking to delay cases
until the law takes effect, officials said.

"We'd go under if we waited until July," said Orange County Superior Court
Judge Ronald P. Kreber, who from his Santa Ana courtroom has sentenced more
than 100 drug offenders to treatment programs. "We'd have been inundated
with cases. We'd have chaos. This helps treatment programs and the courts
get ready."

Proposition 36, which 61% of voters favored, would shift many drug
offenders--including those convicted of possessing, using or transporting
drugs for personal use--from prisons to probation and treatment.

The change could be profound because one in three of the state's 162,000
prisoners is serving time for a drug-related crime.

Orange County's early start in March followed four months of planning by
county health, probation, court, district attorney, public defender and law
enforcement officials.

The hardest part, officials say, will be finding enough providers to handle
the 3,500 to 4,500 drug offenders expected to seek treatment annually in
Orange County.

"We have a concern as to the number of programs, but there's a lot of
interest," said John Bowater, Orange County's chief deputy probation officer.

In Los Angeles County, officials say they expect to divert up to 20,000
additional drug offenders each year into treatment programs.

"It's a monumental undertaking," said Los Angeles County Public Defender
Michael P. Judge, who serves on planning groups gearing up for the changes
required under Proposition 36, which was passed by voters in November.
"Even after the deadline, it's going to be a work in progress. It could
take years before all the issues are eventually settled."

For the past five months, officials throughout California have tried to
figure out how to identify, monitor and treat the tens of thousands of drug
offenders who will now qualify for services.

Proposition 36 will not change the treatment system, commonly called "drug
diversion," that California courts have long offered first-time offenders.
Instead, it will offer a second chance for offenders who have already
utilized first-time-offender counseling.

Orange County officials have not yet determined how many additional
treatment programs they will need. By starting the program early, officials
said, they hope to gauge the need and identify possible problems.

"There will be some minor glitches, but I don't think anyone will be left
behind who shouldn't be," said Tom Havlena, senior assistant public defender.

Nearly every part of the criminal justice system is affected. In Los
Angeles County, for example, 30 existing judges eventually will be trained
and designated to handle Proposition 36 drug offender cases. Probation
officers, who monitor about 65,000 probationers in the county, are gearing
up to absorb as many as 14,000 additional cases.

One of the biggest problems bedeviling L.A. County officials is finding
enough qualified drug treatment providers to meet the expected need.

Drug Testing Isn't Funded--A Red Flag

In Orange County, CEO Michael Schumacher is overseeing the allocation of
the state money. The bulk of the nearly $8 million expected the first year
will go to state-approved treatment programs and for hiring probation
officers to monitor drug offenders' progress.

A potential problem is the new law's restriction against using any
Proposition 36 money on drug testing for offenders in treatment programs.
By most accounts, drug testing plays a vital role because it identifies
addicts who relapse while rewarding those who remain sober.

"We believe testing is critical to a successful treatment program," said
Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Michael A. Tynan, who serves on a
local task force grappling with the new law.

Tynan said judges, probation officials and treatment counselors feel so
strongly about the need for drug testing that they are drafting state
legislation to augment Proposition 36 funds with testing money.

During one recent Drug Court graduation in Los Angeles County, the
defendants who completed the treatment course spoke of their gratitude for
being given an option other than incarceration.

"It saved my life," said Luis Ruiz, a 32-year-old construction worker. "In
fact, before [Drug Court], I wasn't really living, I had no life. I was
just existing one day to the next."

In theory, Proposition 36 would give thousands of other drug defendants a
similar opportunity. Whether they will get it is something judges,
attorneys, health officials and others are waiting to see.

"It's definitely a different approach to the war on drugs," Tynan said.
"We're dealing with a lot of unknowns and a lot of uncertainties."
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