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Opinion

Commentary: Addicted veterans need treatment, not jail time

The (Tacoma) News Tribune

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November 10, 2009 11:59 AM

Drug court is one of the best ideas ever to hit Pierce County’s criminal justice system. It's just been joined by another great idea: veterans drug court.

The county's drug court — one of the nation's first, in 1994 — operates on the premise that treating addicts instead of merely jailing them works better for everyone. Substance-abusers accused of drug- or alcohol-connected crimes – small-time trafficking, theft, drunk driving, for example – must voluntarily opt in. They waive their right to a trial and accept the maximum sentence for their offense.

The sentence is then suspended on condition they follow a strict regimen designed to break their addiction: treatment, participation in group meetings, random urine tests, avoidance of any criminal activity. The Pierce County Alliance runs the treatment side of things.

If they fail, they get the book thrown at them. If they succeed, the charge is dismissed. Studies have shown the program to be much more effective than jail in preventing relapses and further crimes, and saving the taxpayers' money.

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The veterans' drug court, announced last week, is being launched with the help of a three-year, $900,000 grant from the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration. The new program will be able to tap into the treatment and health resources of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

When it opens early next year, it will operate in precisely the same way as existing drug court – but with an additional focus on problems that may have arisen from military service. One RAND study found that 25 to 30 percent of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans report symptoms of psychological disorder, mild or severe. Post-traumatic stress disorder and depression are all too common among troops who’ve seen combat.

To read the complete editorial, visit The (Tacoma) News Tribune.

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