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VETS' COURT? NOT SO FAST SAYS ATTORNEY
WHO DID 27
YEARS IN THE SERVICE -- "This panders to a belief
that
veterans, because of their service, are mentally
or morally
different from the rest of the people in
society."

For more about veterans' courts, click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sesse
arch.php?q=veterans+courts&op=ph
Story here...
http://www.ctlawtr
ibune.com/getarticle.aspx?ID=32920
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-------------------------
Do Vets Need Their Own Court Docket?
Legislative proposal draws interest, concerns about cost
By CHRISTIAN NOLAN
About 16,500 Connecticut residents have served in Iraq and Afghanistan
since the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, many of them for two or three
tours of duty. Like thousands of their brethren across the country, some
have returned home with psychological problems.
Those issues often lead vets to run afoul of the law: the most common
offenses being drug or alcohol related, domestic violence, firearms
violations and breach of peace.
So Senate Majority Leader Martin M. Looney is introducing legislation that
would establish a separate criminal court docket for military veterans.
“Very often the problems veterans have, like post-traumatic stress
disorder, manifest themselves into getting into trouble with the law when
they get home,” Looney said. Looney said by establishing “their veteran
status,” such defendants could then be “referred to treatment” rather than
jailed.
Connecticut attorneys and state officials seem divided by the proposal.
The biggest concern is the potential costs associated with creating a
separate docket and whether it is appropriate for the legal system to
treat veterans differently.
Dr. Linda Schwartz, the commissioner for the state Department of Veterans
Affairs, gives her full support to the idea.

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“We know that some of the returning veterans are feeling the effects of
being in the combat zone,” said Schwartz, who was a nurse during the
Vietnam War. “We know that sending people to prison is not really helping
address the real issues. If we could do early intervention, especially
those with substance abuse problems, it really will work better. In the
long run it’s good for the veterans, their family and the community.”
However, Bristol attorney Kevin Creed, a 27-year Army veteran, is as
strongly opposed to the idea as Schwartz is for it.
“I disagree wholeheartedly. This panders to a belief that veterans,
because of their service, are mentally or morally different from the rest
of the people in society,” said Creed. “This would only add to that
stereotype.”
Creed opined that if 100,000 civilians and 100,000 war veterans of similar
ages and sex were tracked over a period of time, civilians would have the
greater incidences of minor crimes like domestic violence and drug or
alcohol abuse.
“It’s a Hollywood myth that veterans come home and have these problems,”
said Creed. Creed said from his experience as a lawyer, money would be
better spent going towards better medical care for veterans.
But
Southington attorney John T. Nugent, who spent 37 years in the Navy,
thinks a separate court might be a positive move for the state.
“I’ve done a lot of representing of veterans in various courts and it
might be a step in the right direction,” said Nugent, who is chairman of
the Connecticut Bar Association’s Veterans and Military Affairs Committee.
Nugent said it is important that veterans identify themselves as such when
they become ensnared in the legal system, or nobody would know to give
them the appropriate help. Schwartz said she often encourages lawyers to
ask clients if they were in the service.
Preliminary Discussions
If the legislature were to create a veterans docket, the state’s Judicial
Branch would ultimately have to implement it. Chief Court Administrator
Barbara M. Quinn said it is “labor intensive to run special dockets of any
kind.”
“I do think they’re in need of some different kind of handling at times,”
Quinn said of veterans. “But in these economic times it’d be difficult for
us to find the resources necessary to have a special docket.”
Quinn said the Judicial Branch does not keep annual numbers on how many
state court defendants have served in the military. But she acknowledged
that the branch has had preliminary discussions with Schwartz about
establishing a separate docket. “But we haven’t really moved forward
because of the implications for funding,” Quinn said.
Schwartz, however, suggested that the special docket might not be so labor
intensive, and that special veterans court sessions would not need to be
held on a daily basis.
She compared the process to the annual “stand down” that the state
Department of Veterans Affairs hosts in Rocky Hill annually where judges
and magistrates come in and handle about 125 minor cases in one day to
help veterans.
The veterans docket bill must first make it through the General Assembly’s
Judiciary Committee. State Sen. Andrew McDonald, a co-chair of the
committee, said he thinks the bill ultimately “has a very good chance of
passing.”
McDonald’s reservations are also financial. He said his committee must
first discuss with the Judicial Branch if there’s a cost effective way to
enact such a docket. He said a public hearing would likely take place
sometime in March.
Regardless of the fate of Looney’s proposal, the federal government has
already given Connecticut $2 million for a “jail diversion” program to
help veterans with trauma-related disorders get back on their feet.
Jim Tackett, director of veterans’ services at the state Department of
Mental Health and Addiction Services, said the grant will fund a five-year
program that will start this summer in the Norwich area and then branch
out across the state.
Although state mental health officials would not offer an opinion on the
separate court docket, a spokesman said officials would be in contact with
Looney.
“We’ll be having discussions on how to bring these efforts together to
have the greatest impact because there’s a need among the veterans for
jail diversion,” said the spokesman, Wayne Daily. “When treatment is the
more appropriate choice, as opposed to incarceration, it’s in the best
interests of the individual, their family and society. We want to see that
happen.”
-------------------------
posted by Larry Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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