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New Kansas City Court Finds Another Route For Law-Breaking Vets

The Missouri State Court serving much of Kansas City and The Veterans’ Administration Medical Center have inaugurated the region’s first drug court veterans’ program. 

 The core premise is immediate intervention after an arrest in Jackson County.

An avid supporter of both drug and veteran’s court programs, Missouri Supreme Court Justice William Ray Price cited human costs of jailing  offenders with a 44 percent chance most will be back in jail within two years.

 Price said the veterans’ programs will heal internal scars carried by many ex-military people who get in law trouble-- “of course they come back scarred. And don’t they deserve more. They deserve to be helped, not arrested and Veterans’ Court will do that.”

Justice Price, who intends to retire in August after 20 years on the high-court bench praised former and current Jackson County Prosecutors who started and administered the drug programs.

 Price singled out an originator, Claire McCaskill, now a U.S. Senator, and incumbent Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker. Price said McCaskill took a significant political risk pressing forward with a program that had many critics.

The program requires all veterans taking part be supervised by a Missouri Probation Officer.

Those who take part to avoid jail will have supervised treatment at VA Medical Center.

 Diversion cases will last at least a year.

 Both prosecutor and defense lawyer will decide any unique terms for diversion before the veteran begins treatment.

 

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