Essentially this is managed parole which engages the offender rapidly with a clear set of rules and penalties that are stiff enough to encourage compliance and quick enough that there is no desire to engage the whole legal system itself. The sentence is active and not simply forgotten and parked somewhere.
Better folks are responding well to the program and that alone suggests that this needs to become universal. It will not solve all problems but it could well resolve the majority of the cases and that is huge
At some point the war on drugs will end and the statistics will subside to the original levels which were rather low. Yet there will always be those few who go down the drug road, even if it is simply alcohol. Having this protocol in place is a serious gain for the maintenance of civil society.
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Reforming Drug, Alcohol Offenders: 2 Promising Programs
By Gary Feuerberg, Epoch Times | August 24, 2014
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/906448-reforming-drug-alcohol-offenders-2-promising-programs/
WASHINGTON—A couple of frustrated circuit judges—one from South
Dakota and the other from Hawaii—wanted to find a better way for
changing the behavior of alcohol and drug abusers whom they saw
repeatedly in their courtrooms. Both had been career prosecutors before
becoming judges. They independently created programs with a similar
philosophy for improving probationer behavior.
The two judges spoke as founders of these programs on Aug. 21 at the Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C.
As an alternative to imprisonment, placing offenders under probation
supervision has not worked out well. Too often the offender violates the
conditions of probation, and nothing happens as a consequence.
In theory, putting a defendant on probation instead of sending him or
her straight to prison gives the defendant an opportunity to
rehabilitate. Defendants who do not behave well would be sent to prison
to finish their sentence or given a new sentence based on the initial
crime. But in practice, for those arrested repeatedly, too often the
offender’s behavior in the use of drugs or alcohol doesn’t change. If
and when probation will be revoked is far from certain.
Revoking probation status by holding a probation revocation hearing
is traditionally a slow process, and can be a very inefficient and
ineffective way to address the problem. It’s highly likely that a
probation officer will seek revocation only after the probationer has
committed numerous offenses. Many probationers wind up in prison or
abscond, and relatively few make progress in overcoming their addiction.
Steven S. Alm, circuit judge, Honolulu, Hawaii. (Gary Feuerberg/Epoch Times)
Punishment Swift and Certain
Steven S. Alm, a circuit judge, Honolulu, Hawaii,
and Founder of Hawaii’s Opportunity Probation with Enforcement (HOPE)
said that an offender will keep using drugs or alcohol when nothing
happens as a consequence for a year or two. The probation officer then
has the unappealing choice of talking to the violators or writing up the
violations and sending them back to court for the judge to give them 5
or 10 years in prison.
“We have good POs [probation officers], we have caring judges, but
it’s the system itself that is broken,” he said. He came to that
conclusion in June 2004, when he was reviewing the felony trial calendar
and saw the many motions to revoke probation.
Judge Alm thought what might work better is something similar to how
he handles misbehavior in his own family. “Something happens
immediately. It doesn’t have to be severe but it has to be swift and it
has to be certain.”
Alm said they started the program in 2004 with 34 cases of
methamphetamine users. He asked the probation officers to refer their
toughest cases, and that he didn’t want to exclude anyone. He was ready
then to institute his policy of the offender going to jail every time
there was a violation.
“You don’t show up for a drug test, I’m going to issue a warrant.
Then when you get arrested, you are given 30 days in jail. If you show
up and admit to [using drugs], you get a few days.” He also said later
that if you show up and deny using drugs, and they have to send the
results to a laboratory, he gives 15 days jail time.
“HOPE probation is swift, certain, consistent and proportionate,” he said.
Larry Long, circuit judge, South Dakota. (Gary Feuerberg/Epoch Times)
Straight to Jail
Larry Long, a circuit judge of the second judicial
circuit in South Dakota, initiated the 24/7 Sobriety Program in January
2005 when he was the South Dakota Attorney General.
“The goal is to keep the defendant sober 24 hours a day, seven days a week,” said Judge Long.
Most program participants must submit to a breath test twice a day in the presence of law enforcement.
A
modification of the testing was needed to accommodate offenders in
rural South Dakota, who may have to travel 30 miles to a sheriff’s
office or 60 miles twice a day, Long said. The small proportion who live
too far for twice daily testing use an electronic ankle bracelet, which
monitors continuously for alcohol consumption.
Long said the program needed to be enhanced when it discovered that
offenders were switching drugs, from alcohol to some illicit drug. The
drug patch and random urine testing were added to the program.
If the offender doesn’t show up for testing or fails it, he or she
immediately goes to jail. Long said the next day, he or she is released
and “put back in the system and starts over.” Long said it was designed
to operate like an electric fence. He asked the audience how many who
have touched an electric fence have touched it a second time. “It’s not
more complicated than that,” he said.
Assessment
Both programs have had a high degree of success in reducing substance use, criminal recidivism, and incarceration.
Long’s 24/7 Sobriety Program’s twice daily testing has administered
7.1 million tests to 34,207 participants from February 2005 to August
2014. The passing rate has been 99.2 percent. The much less frequent
urinalysis and drug patch tests had passing rates of 96 and 82 percent,
respectively.
In 2007, the S.D. legislature made the 24/7 Sobriety Program
available to all crimes, not just drunk driving. It is used as a
condition for pre-trial release and suspended sentences, as well as by
parole boards, as a condition for discharging prisoners from the
penitentiary.
The analysis of Judge Alm’s HOPE program shows it too is a success.
In a randomized controlled study comparing HOPE participants with a
control group of drug users on probation, HOPE probationers were 55
percent less likely to be arrested for a new crime, 72 percent less
likely to use drugs, and 61 percent less likely to skip appointments
with their probation officer. The great achievement: the HOPE
probationers served or were sentenced to serve half the time in prison
than the control group.
An amazing finding from these programs is that “most people can stop
using drugs without going to treatment,” said Alm. Long’s sobriety
program for alcohol discovered the same thing in South Dakota, Alm said.
Their programs have caught on elsewhere in the country. Judge Alm
said that 18 states and about 60 courtrooms were using some version of
HOPE. Washington State put its entire at-risk population on it—17,000
parolees and probationers, he said.
Judge Alm acknowledged that the HOPE program won’t work for the most
incorrigible offenders. He said, “25 or 30 percent should be sent to
prison at sentencing. But that means 70 percent should be supervised by
the community. And if you do that right, you can save taxpayers, you can
help offenders and their families avoid going to prison, and you can
reduce crimes.”
Long made a case that the 24/7 program has reduced traffic deaths in
South Dakota. He showed a graph of the number killed by year from 2000
to 2013. For the five years prior to the 24/7 program, the average
yearly number of deaths was 83. For the nine years that the program has
been running, 2005-2013, the average number has fallen to 55.3 deaths.
While it’s true that more attention to seat belts and safer cars have
probably impacted this number, Long said he is confident that the
program of testing 2,200 daily for alcohol consumption was a major
factor in saving lives.
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