Las Vegas Review-Journal

Specialty Court’s Soals: Blaze trail, help Addicts

Users can get treatment within hours after arrest

- By Carolyn Thompson The Associated Press

BUFFALO, N.Y. — After three defendants fatally overdosed in a single week last year, it became clear that Buffalo’s ordinary drug treatment court was no match for the heroin and painkiller crisis.

Now the city is experiment­ing with the nation’s first opioid crisis interventi­on court, which can get users into treatment within hours of their arrest instead of days, requires them to check in with a judge every day for a month instead of once a week, and puts them on strict curfews. Administer­ing justice takes a back seat to the overarchin­g goal of simply keeping defendants alive.

“The idea behind it,” said court project director Jeffrey Smith, “is only about how many people are still breathing each day when we’re finished.”

Funded with a three-year $300,000 U.S. Justice Department grant, the program began May 1 with the intent of treating 200 people in a year and providing a model that other heroin-wracked cities can replicate.

Two months in, organizers are optimistic. As of late last week, none of the 80 people who agreed to the program had overdosed, though about 10 warrants had been issued for missed appearance­s.

“We have an epidemic on our hands. … We’ve got to start thinking outside the box here,” said Erie County District Attorney John Flynn. “And if that means coddling an individual who has a minor offense, who is not a career criminal, who’s got a serious drug problem, then I’m guilty of coddling.”

Regular drug treatment courts that emerged in response to crack cocaine in the 1980s take people in after they’ve been arraigned and in some cases released. The toll of opioids and profile of their users, some of them hooked by legitimate prescripti­ons, called for more drastic measures.

Acceptance into opioid crisis court means detox, inpatient or outpatient care, 8 p.m. curfews, and at least 30 consecutiv­e days of in-person meetings with the judge. A typical drug treatment court might require such appearance­s once a week or even once a month.

“This 30-day thing is like being beat up and being asked to get in the ring again, and you’re required to,” 36-year-old Ron Woods said.

Buffalo’s get-tough court is part of a nationwide push to come up with ways to use the criminal justice system to address the opioid crisis. In April, the National Governors Associatio­n announced that eight states — Alaska, Indiana, Kansas, Minnesota, North Carolina, New Jersey, Virginia and Washington — will together study, among other things, how to expand treatment within the criminal justice system.

 ?? Carolyn Thompson ?? The Associated Press City Court Judge Craig Hannah presides at Opiate Crisis Interventi­on Court in Buffalo, N.Y., the first program of its kind in the United States.
Carolyn Thompson The Associated Press City Court Judge Craig Hannah presides at Opiate Crisis Interventi­on Court in Buffalo, N.Y., the first program of its kind in the United States.

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