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January 11, 2011

The High Price of Restrictive Federal Gun Laws in Colorado Domestci Violence Cases

A Fort Carson soldier Chester Duncan, who was featured Sunday in a Gazette investigation of troops who deploy with pending felonies, appeared in court Monday on leave from Afghanistan. He hoped for a light sentence that would ensure he could return.

The judge did not give it to him.

In 4th Judicial District Court, the 28-year-old specialist pleaded guilty to choking his wife and slapping his daughter.

The prosecutor had agreed to a plea deal she thought would allow Duncan to continue his tour as a combat engineer, hunting hidden roadside bombs and flying remote-controlled aircraft. The soldier would plead to 3rd degree assault -- a misdemeanor -- and receive a one-year deferred sentence, which meant if he went to domestic violence and child abuse classes, he would do no jail time and his record would be wiped clean in 12 months.

Both the prosecutor and defense attorney told the judge that it was the right move because Duncan and his wife had made amends, he had gone to Army family violence classes, and the couple had not fought since his arrest in the fall of 2009. In fact, while he was in court, she was going into labor with their third child.

"Is this what you want?" 4th Judicial District Judge Deborah Grohs asked Duncan, who stood before the bench.

Duncan said yes.

For defendants to take a plea agreement, they must explain to the judge what they did wrong.

Duncan, a soldier in the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, described how he got into an argument with his wife, then pushed her and held her down.

"Did you choke her?" the judge asked.

"Yes," Duncan said.

"Did you cause your wife physical pain?" the judge asked.

"Yes," Duncan said.

The prosecutor and defense attorney asked the judge that the assault charge not be categorized as a domestic violence crime, because under federal law, that would bar Duncan from possessing a firearm for the 12-month sentence, which began Monday.

"If he could not hold a gun, he may not be able to go back to Afghanistan," deputy district attorney Carrie Sample told the judge.

Duncan's public defender, Rory Taylor, argued that Duncan's case was not really domestic violence, just the unfortunate aftermath of a 15-month deployment in Iraq that had resulted in "a lot of tension."

The judge listened to the arguments, but said she was ultimately constrained by law.

"You are getting a very nice plea agreement," she told Duncan. "If you complete the requirements you will have no criminal record."

Then she sighed. After a long pause, she noted that Duncan and his wife were married at the time of the crime and he choked her until she was unable to breath.

"This is, indeed, an act of domestic violence," the judge said. "I have total sympathy for you and respect your service, but this is what it is, I can't make it disappear. I know it may mean your termination from the Army, but it is what it is."

She determined that the crime should be categorized as domestic violence.

It is not clear whether the Army will return Duncan to Afghanistan, or whether he risks being discharged because of his conviction. A spokesman for his brigade did not respond by press time to an e-mail request for comment.

Read more:

http://www.gazette.com/articles/soldier-110902-court-return.html#ixzz1AjXFpMlO

H. Michael's Take

This tragic circumstance highlights the unyielding nature of "all or nothing" federal gun laws whose passage was a knee jerk reaction to a powerful feminist lobby. By removing discretion from a judge - (here it occurs at the state law level - which charaterizes a case as Colorado "Domestic Violence") - based solely upon the identification of the victim and ignoring all other pieces of information in a case mitigating his actions - the state legislature prevents the judge from doing what the judge is elected to do... decide the case results.

Both the DA and the Defense Attorney must have known the judge could not disregard the law - which is mandatory - identifying this as a domestic violence case. This judge had no choice but to impose the domestic violence "tag" to the soldier's actions - thus - in my opinion - ending his military career.

The pendulum must swing back and judges must be allowed to do their jobs and answer for their decisions... and not wring their hands and blame the mandatory nature of Colorado's domestic violence laws..

This must change. Change begins with you - the voter.

July 19, 2010

Veteran's "Mental Health" Courts Show the Proper Compassion and Understanding

Ex-Marine Samuel Betancourt, a veteran of battlegrounds in Iraq and Afghanistan, came home with the demons of war haunting his mind."I started getting flashbacks," Betancourt said. "I started having dreams about combat."He was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. But instead of getting treatment, Betancourt started getting high on marijuana and methamphetamines.

After his fourth arrest in Dinuba on drug charges, Betancourt, 27, was facing six years in state prison."I thought that was a little extreme," said Betancourt, who now lives in Visalia. "I thought I'd better get a lawyer."His attorney directed him to the new Veterans Court in Tulare County Superior Cour (CA), a 5-month-old program exclusively for combat veterans who run afoul of the law.

Instead of being locked up, Betancourt was enrolled in an 18-month mental health treatment program approved by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.Some civil liberties advocates are concerned about creating a double standard. But in light of their sacrifices, veterans are entitled to special judicial consideration, officials said. "These are people who have served their country and as a result have received mental or physical injuries," said Tulare County Assistant District Attorney Don Gallian, who oversees the program and is himself a veteran. "We want to pay back a little bit for what they did for us".

Congress is now considering legislation to fund veterans courts for nonviolent offenders who have drug problems.

Veterans courts follow the drug court model: Instead of jail, the defendant is diverted to mental health treatment. But the judge can incarcerate defendants who skip therapy, break the law or fail random drug tests. To be eligible, the veteran must have served in a combat zone, been honorably discharged and be diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury or a related psychological problem.

Under the terms of his veterans court order, Betancourt attends three alcohol or drug support group meetings a week, can't hang out with people who drink or take drugs, gets random drug tests, meets weekly with a psychologist and his probation officer, comes to court once a month and attends group therapy for combat veterans.

In Colorado:

In Colorado, the Fourth Judicial District in Colorado Springs (El Paso County) has initiated the same type of program. Judges, probation officials, legislators, representatives of the district attorney and public defender and state and El Paso County health and human services offices gathered in February of this year at the El Paso County Judicial Building to announce the formal opening of the newly developed Veteran Trauma Court and to launch and to establish Colorado's first court specifically designed to meet the unique needs of military veterans with service-related trauma disorders who have entered the criminal justice system.

The grant-funded court is modeled after other problem solving courts such as drug and mental health courts. It will offer eligible offenders an alternative to incarceration through treatment and counseling and regular court appearances.

The Colorado Division of Behavioral Health estimates approximately 1,540 veterans will receive diversion and treatment services through the life of the five-year grant.Those eligible for treatment and counseling services through the court are military veterans charged with a lower-level felony in the 4th Judicial District who experienced trauma related to military service and have been diagnosed with a trauma spectrum disorder and exhibit a willingness to actively participate in treatment and recovery and fully cooperate with the court.


H. Michael's Take:

Statistics on the success of veterans courts nationwide haven't been compiled. But in the Buffalo program, 30 of the 150 vets enrolled have graduated and none of the graduates has been arrested since, said coordinator Jack O'Connor. Five flunked out and went to jail or paid a fine.

Prosecutors, (and ex prosecutors like myself) know that the upsurge of veterans being arrested for vandalism, drug use and domestic violence, when their backgrounds show no history of wrongdoing before going to war, means something is wrong that can be traced to the obvious trauma these men and women suffered in war.

In a 2007 study by the Rand Corp. estimated that about 18 percent of veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan are coming home with post-traumatic stress syndrome and half don't seek treatment. About 1.7 million service members have served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Veterans don't break the law more than anyone else, but those who do are likely to be abusing drugs and alcohol, according to a 2000 study by the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics.

In short - this idea, like Mental Health Courts ( see older Blog Entry), is a good idea whose time has come!