The Cycle co-host Ari Melber answered your questions about drug courts for veterans Tuesday. Judge Robert Russell explained how courts seek to rehabilitate—rather than incarcerate—veterans who have committed crimes on The Cycle last week. Here are Ari’s responses.
Alicia Maule: This is an interesting topic Ari (it reminds me of a college paper I did on pregnant inmates). Do you think this effort to rehab rather than imprison veterans, will lead to wider reform of how we treat/punish men and women who are not veterans?
Ari Melber: Great question—and probably yes.
Judge Russell’s veterans’ court was based on the “drug court” model, which pushes rehab over jail for defendants who commit to treatment. As a policy, that model can be available to all. Some states use it more than others.
The veterans’ court model is also tailored to address mental and substance-related challenges that are specific to veterans, and thus typically involves working with government veterans programs.
Abby Borovitz: This question came from our Facebook friend Kevin Burgess “All veterans ask for is an orderly life, with both discipline and positive results for all of our efforts.”
Ari Melber: I definitely hear you there, while interviewing some veterans for this piece, one thing that came through was many saying they don’t expect any kind of special treatment—they served, they surely know the value of hard work, and if they struggled with substance abuse what they needed most was a program for rehabilitation and a fresh start. As I’ve written, I think that’s the approach we should generally aim for first, before prioritizing prison for users.
Krystal_Ball_Is_The_Best: The Republican Party is the more jingoistic party and seems to constantly accuse the other side of not being supportive enough of our troops. How can they do this while cutting VA benefits, food stamps (which many veterans are no), letting them stay homeless, and incarcerating them rather than providing them the mental help that they need? Is it just cynical politics on their part or do they really suffer from such severe cognitive dissonance?
Ari Melber: You’re hitting on a major issue here, how despite many politicians’ rhetoric about our veterans, sometimes our government fails to provide them the benefits and protection they’ve so clearly earned.
I think the example of veterans’ courts shows a more positive development on this front—while 60% of incarcerated veterans have substance abuse problems (as the Presumed Guilty article reports), these courts were started at the local level by judges and veterans’ advocates (i.e. government employees) precisely to better address the needs of part of the veterans community. The Obama administration’s Justice Dept. would argue it is also facilitating the right services for veterans here, as they advocate more of these programs at the federal level, as would some Congressional Republicans who support similar efforts.
PS—Your KBITB screen name is awesome.
Fred Orth: Wonder which came forward first, the legal system, the military healthcare system, or the private medical profession? I suspect that it was medical mental treatments, catching up with reality, that shouted loudest, first. If so, good for them.









