COLUMBIA, S.C. - Chief Justice Jean Toal has
sharply restricted pretrial intervention programs not run by
prosecutors.
The written order came after prosecutors said they were concerned
magistrate or municipal judges were allowing charges to be dropped
against defendants who normally would not be accepted into similar
prosecutor-run programs, Toal said.
Most pretrial intervention programs allow first-time offenders
that commit minor crimes to perform community service, and other
steps, like counseling or paying restitution, in exchange for
clearing the offender's record.
Toal's order doesn't end the programs created by judges or
magistrates, but it does require those programs to get approval from
prosecutors. It also does not affect anyone who has completed a
judge-run program.
The proliferation and abuse of pretrial intervention programs has
been a problem around South Carolina for several years, said
Richland County prosecutor Barney Giese, who also is president of
the South Carolina Solicitors Association.
Most county-level prosecutors worry pretrial programs run by
magistrates or municipal judges might not give defendants the help
they need, Giese said.
For example, a judge might order offenders to do community
service without requiring them to complete alcohol or drug
counseling, he said.
Also, a lack of record keeping in pretrial programs that are not
run by prosecutors might allow some defendants to participate in
those programs in more than one county, Giese said.
State law allows a defendant to participate in a diversion
program only one time, no matter where they are charged, he
said.
About 10,700 offenders statewide apply annually for the
prosecutor-run programs, according to the state Prosecution
Coordination Commission. Of those, about 9,300 are accepted, and
about 7,500 complete the programs, records show.
People accused of underage drinking and shoplifting are typical
defendants in those programs, said William Bilton, the commission's
executive director.
About half of the charges handled through the programs carry
maximum 30-day jail sentences, Bilton said. The other half are more
serious crimes, such as second-degree burglary, he said.
Anyone accused of DUI or a violent crime cannot get into a
pretrial intervention program.
Information from: The
State