THE ISSUE: Solicitor David Pascoe
David Pascoe made headlines in his
successful bid to win the post of 1st Circuit solicitor. He made promises to
reduce caseloads, vigorously prosecute violent offenders and create alternatives
such as drug courts and a worthless check program.
In just more than a
year in office, the St. Matthews resident has delivered.
Notably, he
inherited 53 pending murder cases in the three-county circuit, 37 of them in
Orangeburg County. During 2005, he took 34 of those cases to court, getting
convictions or guilty pleas in 32 cases.
Reducing the caseload also meant
getting people out of the Orangeburg-Calhoun Detention Center, where many had
languished for months, even years, awaiting their day in court. While all such
cases were not pending because of lack of action by prosecutors, the fact
remains that keeping people jailed locally was and is expensive.
Pascoe
told Orangeburg Rotarians this past week he remains determined to keep the
caseload in check, even though his office is handling 2,000 cases a year with a
staff of five prosecutors.
The detention center is not designed to handle
prisoners on a long-term basis. That is the job of a prison, Pascoe
said.
Reducing the jail population saves taxpayers money and eases the
burden on the detention center personnel in managing the population. There also
is the reduced risk of having someone jailed who ultimately is found not guilty
— or for whom the case is dismissed for lack of evidence. And cases don’t get
easier to try with time, Pascoe said.
Even as he has addressed violent
crime, the solicitor also delivered on his commitment to do something about
people writing bad checks. His Worthless Check Program has resulted in the
recovery for businesses of $44,000 and up to $30,000 in fees paid to
magistrate’s court. The program should have a deterrent effect with offenders
being made to pay.
The solicitor also has been on the cutting edge of
addressing a problem that is epidemic in Orangeburg and termed by the state
attorney general one of the worst in the state. By assigning a prosecutor to
pursue domestic violence cases in magistrate’s court, the solicitor can boast of
a 75 percent conviction rate.
It’s the type of effort Attorney General
Henry McMaster — he has a volunteer program aimed at getting attorneys to sign
on to prosecute magistrate court cases of domestic violence — is glad to see and
doesn’t get from every circuit. It’s necessary here.
Yet it is the
problem of juvenile crime that Pascoe terms the root of problems. “The vast
majority of violent felons started off as juvenile offenders,” he
said.
He has two approaches. One is the pending creation of what he calls
a church diversion program. It is an effort through which juveniles committing
certain types of offenses are given a choice of going to the Department of
Juvenile Justice or being required to attend church or other special mentoring
programs.
Pascoe says the effort is a way to achieve rehabilitation. He’s
seen in work in his previous prosecutor’s role in Richland County and says it
can work here.
The other side of dealing with juvenile crime comes in
prosecuting and punishing those who commit more serious offenses. He cited a
recent decision to prosecute a 14-year-old in Orangeburg as an adult. The
teenager is accused of being part of a group that committed armed robberies, and
with being the triggerman in shooting a man in the face.
The solicitor
says leaving the case in Family Court would have limited the scope of any
sentence and seen the teen’s record expunged as he got older.
He said a
teenager committing such violent acts must be dealt with outside the bounds of
rehabilitation. Protection of the community from predators is a primary mission,
he said.
Pascoe is right: While supporting programs to keep people away
from crime and rehabilitating where possible, there must be the willingness to
remove from the community’s midst those who would plague the people with
violence.
And that’s exactly what he’s been doing.