The Day

Judicial Branch forms opioid task force

Group will look at available programs to help defendants who are dependent on drugs

- By KAREN FLORIN Day Staff Writer

Does Connecticu­t need courts dedicated specially to drug-dependent defendants?

The state’s criminal justice leaders will explore that concept of drug courts over the next three months.

The Judicial Branch has created a task force to study the feasibilit­y of establishi­ng Opioid Interventi­on Courts as required by a law that was enacted during the last legislativ­e session.

The task force will meet at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 18, and on Wednesday, Oct. 17, and Monday, Nov. 5, as it prepares to report back to the General Assembly by Jan. 1. The meetings will take place at the Torrington Courthouse.

One of the first orders of business will be to look at programs currently available to help defendants who are dependent on drugs, according to the agenda. The Judicial Branch indicated in testimony to the Judiciary Committee that the branch, along with the Department of Correction and Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services, has many programs to address drug and opioid abuse and performs drug screening, interventi­on programs and other alternativ­es to incarcerat­ion through the regular course of business.

“The Judicial Branch has incorporat­ed many of the principles of drug courts into all dockets and currently provides the same level of services to people in need of treatment from any docket,” the written testimony said.

The Connecticu­t Criminal Defense Lawyers Associatio­n, which represents the public and private lawyers who defend those who are opioid-dependent, submitted testimony in support of drug courts, indicating they previously had existed in Connecticu­t but were phased out due to budgetary constraint­s and other considerat­ions.

“Drug addiction has become one of the many social problems that has been relegated to the criminal justice system,” said the CCDLA written testimony. “But as with homelessne­ss and mental illness, handcuffs and jail cells haven’t made things better and have cost much more than the treatment and services that can. It doesn’t have to be this way. America can safely reduce incarcerat­ion.”

Public Act 18-166 requires the chief court administra­tor, in consultati­on with the chief public defender, chief state’s attorney and the University of Connecticu­t School of Law’s dean, to study the feasibilit­y of establishi­ng courts that specialize in criminal or juvenile matters where a defendant is an opioid-dependent person who could benefit from intensive court monitoring and treatment.

One of the Judicial Branch programs already in place at some state courthouse­s, including the Broad Street, New London, courthouse known as Geographic­al Area 10, is in the Treatment Pathway Program, in which some arrestees work with social workers to get into treatment rather than prison.

Because of the high demand for interventi­on, GA10, the Norwich courthouse and courts in Bridgeport, Waterbury, New Haven and Hartford have an Early Screening and Interventi­on Program in which a part-time prosecutor and resource coordinato­r identify and work with people who are addicted. The program currently is funded by a grant from a private foundation.

According to Charlie Duffy, a local volunteer and activist who works as a part-time consultant for Chief State’s Attorney Kevin T. Kane, the program at GA10 has been operating since May and has served dozens of people.

“There’s a variety of men and women who have got issues and histories,” Duffy said by phone Friday afternoon. “One of the important things about the program is that the prosecutor­s are getting informatio­n, and the court, about details of the person’s life and situation and about alternativ­e treatment programs, so they can use all of it as the basis for making appropriat­e decisions about what to do with a case.”

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