Difference between revisions of "Chris Christie (Drug Policy)"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>BenB |
imported>BenB |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
− | + | ===Focus on Treatment First with Expansion of Drug Courts:=== | |
− | + | Governor Christie has championed the use of drug courts in the state of New Jersey, which allow first time, non-violent offenders, the opportunity to get the treatment they need rather than serving jail time. The Governor expanded mandatory drug court for first time non-violent drug offenders across the state, and is calling for the expansion drug courts to every state. | |
− | |||
− | |||
*The rate at which drug court graduates are re-arrested for new offenses is 16% and the reconviction rate is 8%. This is compared to re-arrest rates for drug offenders released from prison, which stand at 54% with a re-conviction rate of 43%. | *The rate at which drug court graduates are re-arrested for new offenses is 16% and the reconviction rate is 8%. This is compared to re-arrest rates for drug offenders released from prison, which stand at 54% with a re-conviction rate of 43%. | ||
*An average institutional cost per inmate is approximately $38,900, whereas the cost for an active drug court participant is roughly $11,379. | *An average institutional cost per inmate is approximately $38,900, whereas the cost for an active drug court participant is roughly $11,379. | ||
Line 14: | Line 12: | ||
[https://d70h9a36p82zs.cloudfront.net/issues/Criminal_Justice_Reform.pdf (CCWJR)] | [https://d70h9a36p82zs.cloudfront.net/issues/Criminal_Justice_Reform.pdf (CCWJR)] | ||
− | + | ===Simplified Quotes=== | |
*Allow private sector to offer drug treatment programs. (Nov 2015) | *Allow private sector to offer drug treatment programs. (Nov 2015) | ||
*Treatment, not jail, for drug addicts; it's a disease. (Nov 2015) | *Treatment, not jail, for drug addicts; it's a disease. (Nov 2015) | ||
Line 23: | Line 21: | ||
*Drug courts: mandate treatment, not imprisonment. (Jan 2014) | *Drug courts: mandate treatment, not imprisonment. (Jan 2014) | ||
− | [http://www.ontheissues.org/Chris_Christie.htm#Drugs | + | [http://www.ontheissues.org/Chris_Christie.htm#Drugs (OTI:Drugs)] |
+ | Full quotes available on source. |
Latest revision as of 18:01, 27 January 2016
Christie | Drug Policy | (section page)
Focus on Treatment First with Expansion of Drug Courts:
Governor Christie has championed the use of drug courts in the state of New Jersey, which allow first time, non-violent offenders, the opportunity to get the treatment they need rather than serving jail time. The Governor expanded mandatory drug court for first time non-violent drug offenders across the state, and is calling for the expansion drug courts to every state.
- The rate at which drug court graduates are re-arrested for new offenses is 16% and the reconviction rate is 8%. This is compared to re-arrest rates for drug offenders released from prison, which stand at 54% with a re-conviction rate of 43%.
- An average institutional cost per inmate is approximately $38,900, whereas the cost for an active drug court participant is roughly $11,379.
Governor Christie also called for ending the current dysfunctional, ad-hoc approach for implementing drug courts being used on the federal level.
- As President, Christie would make drug court mandatory in all 94 federal districts. He will implement a system to review and analyze outcomes of the various drug court models and institute best practices guidance for federal judges and prosecutors.
Simplified Quotes
- Allow private sector to offer drug treatment programs. (Nov 2015)
- Treatment, not jail, for drug addicts; it's a disease. (Nov 2015)
- I support medical not recreational marijuana. (Sep 2015)
- Mandatory drug treatment, not jail, for first time dealers. (Sep 2015)
- Drug addiction is a disease: treatment instead of jail. (Apr 2015)
- Drug addiction is a disease & it can be treated. (Jan 2015)
- Drug courts: mandate treatment, not imprisonment. (Jan 2014)
(OTI:Drugs) Full quotes available on source.