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New Hampshire Considers Veterans’ Treatment Instead of Prosecution

A bill would require each county to offer a treatment option as an alternative to the traditional court process for veterans and active military members. About 8 percent of the state’s corrections system population served in the military.

US Department of Veterans Affairs
Democratic members of Pennsylvania's congressional delegation are pressing the Veterans Affairs Pittsburgh Healthcare System to address staffing, communication and other challenges they say are impacting the quality of care for almost 85,000 veterans.
(Dreamstime/TNS)
More of New Hampshire’s 94,000 veterans with behavioral health challenges would be able to resolve criminal charges through treatment under a bill getting broad support from lawmakers.

House Bill 1589 has been endorsed by the state Department of Military Affairs and Veterans Services and includes funding for counties that incur expenses, such as providing mental health or substance use disorder treatment. The bill would require each county to offer veterans a treatment option as an alternative to the traditional court process for veterans and active military members.

It passed the House on a voice vote and is now before the House Finance Committee for a second look because it includes state spending.

new hampshire rep Michael Moffett
Rep. Michael Moffett, a Loudon Republican and Marine veteran, is the sponsor of House Bill 1589. (Screenshot Courtesy of The New Hampshire Bulletin)
Rep. Michael Moffett, a Loudon Republican who served 25 years in the Marines, sponsored the bill after hearing about similar programs in other states.

“Someone who joins the military and sacrifices their personal sovereignty for their country’s greater good does rate, in my view, some unique attention when they are broken during their service to their country,” Moffett told the House Judiciary Committee during the bill’s public hearing. “And this is not to excuse criminal behavior at all. But unique sentencing options, through a veterans court, that limit or reduce incarceration could have its value.”

According to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, more than half of justice-involved veterans have mental health problems or substance-abuse disorders.

In 2021, the U.S. Department of Justice releasedthe findings of a 2016 survey that estimated 107,400 veterans were in federal and state prisons, including local jails. Of the 1,869 veteran offenders sentenced in fiscal year 2019, more than 1 in 5 had participated in a combat operation, the United States Sentencing Commission reported in 2021.

Within the state corrections system, 155 inmates report having served in the military, about 8 percent of the population, said Department of Corrections spokesperson Jane Graham.

Since 2014, the state has provided veterans treatment as an alternative to court but only through small programs in three courts, Rockingham County Superior Court and circuit courts in Nashua and Manchester. The participation rate has been low. At the start of the year, nine veterans were enrolled in the Manchester program, while three were in Nashua’s. There are seven active participants in the Rockingham County court.

The bill’s supporters say the limited number of sites and lack of a coordinator have made it difficult to expand the program to more people.

The bill would require a veterans treatment court or track in every county. It would also create a veterans court coordinator to work with stakeholders to design and implement a consistent statewide program that would consider the specific needs of veterans, share resources across the state, and measure outcomes.

Rep. Bob Lynn, a Windham Republican and one of the bill’s co-sponsors, said the goal is to ensure more military members have access to the treatment alternative, geographically and via a more formal referral process.

“This is an opportunity to get it everywhere,” he said. “Having a coordinator for this program, I think, would go a long way to (achieving) that.”

Veterans treatment courts, which number over 400 in the country, are similar to mental health and drug courts. Participants must check in with a judge regularly to confirm they are complying with their treatment plan but also to get support and guidance if they are struggling.

The program would have to integrate alcohol and drug treatment and mental health services. Participants would also be drug tested frequently, according to the bill.

Felony- and misdemeanor-level offenses would be eligible. It would be open to military members who’ve experienced service-related sexual trauma, brain injury, psychological disorder, or substance use disorder.

Military members who complete the court-ordered treatment program could avoid charges; have their charges dropped; get probation or a suspended sentence instead of incarceration; or serve a shorter time behind bars, under the bill.

They could also apply to have their charges annulled a year later, under the bill.

Kevin Grady of the State Veterans Advisory Committee said the legislation would benefit veterans’ families, too.

“Our motto is when one of us serves, all of us serve,” he told the House Judiciary Committee. “So if you incarcerate somebody who has an issue, … when they get out that issue hasn’t been solved. And this is an attempt to bring together all the resources to solve the problem at the lowest level.”

Counties could apply for matching grants, ranging from $100,000 to $245,000 depending on the size of the county, for its expenses, such as treatment programs. Counties would be required to seek federal funding first.

Warren Perry, deputy adjutant general at the Department of Military Affairs and Veterans Services, said the treatment court alternative has been shown to reduce recidivism, and thereby costs to the state and counties.

“Veterans would be held accountable to complete these programs,” he told the House Judiciary Committee. “And if they don’t complete the programs, then their alternative sentencing goes away and they end up being sentenced.”


This article was first published by the New Hampshire Bulletin. You can read the original article here.