District Attorney seeks more money for operating
Jay Hare /
District Attorney Doug Valeska shows two guns to a Hobo Pantry store clerk during Andrevis Davis’ trial for shooting two Dothan Police officers during a robbery.
Editor’s Note: Citing pending budget cuts, Houston County District Attorney Doug Valeska has received legislative approval for a $20 court cost increase for all criminal, civil and child support cases, $9 of which would go to his office. As the bill awaits the governor’s signature, Valeska’s need for additional funding prompted an Alabama Open Records request by the Dothan Eagle. The following is the first of a series based on that information.
Sometime late last year, Alabama’s 41 district attorneys were made aware of pending budget cuts from the state, which provides about 31 percent of the Houston County DA’s total budget.
With the economy being what it is, and in a state that depends heavily on sales taxes for operating revenue, the pending 13.27 percent cuts might have been seen as inevitable. The cuts went into effect during the second quarter of fiscal year 2009.
When there are shortfalls to any budget, ideally, two things happen: New revenue is generated and/or cuts are made. Local District Attorney Doug Valeska sought new revenue and said he is contemplating cuts.
In January, he asked the Houston County Commission for approval to seek a $9 per case legislative fee hike for all criminal, civil, child support and traffic cases. The total increase is $20, as Houston County Commissioners tacked on another $10 for an expansion to the county jail and another $1 is going to Circuit Clerk Carla Woodall’s office for manpower needs.
Some judges and law enforcement supported the fee increase, saying the bad guys are the ones who will foot the bill. But the costs are far-reaching. Speeders will pay more too, as will people who sue in civil court.
County commissioners Bobby Snellgrove and Curtis Harvey voted against the increase. Because the current recession has resulted in increased job losses, both men said now is not the time to raise fees.
The request prevailed on a 3-2 vote.
Valeska, who represents the 20th Judicial Circuit comprised of Henry and Houston counties, said had he known there was going to be proration, he might have rethought some of his expenditures and been a little less generous to local and state victim’s rights groups, which received more than $108,000 from his office last year.
Saying “justice is not free,” Valeska says additional monies are needed to maintain the efficiency of his office, whose staff faces an ever-rising case load and now must handle additional activity that comes with last year’s creation of a new circuit judgeship.
Valeska said he will use the funds to hire an additional prosecutor for the fifth judgeship for the circuit.
Currently, the Alabama District Attorney’s Association reports that 11 counties have already passed bills similar to the one Valeska is seeking.
There are about 18 to 20 other counties seeking local bills to increase fees this legislative session, according to Randy Hillman, executive director of the Alabama District Attorney’s Association.
Most have passed the Senate. Hillman wrote in an e-mail that the governor’s signature is all that’s left. With the expected passage, 30 of 67 counties will have seen court cost increases.
The shortfall
The Governor’s Deficit Prevention Plan reduces Valeska’s annual state appropriation by $98,165.
According to documents the Dothan Eagle received from the DA, that figure is about $10,000 less than contributions Valeska’s office made to local and state victims’ groups, and is close to what the office spent on seminars and travel over the last year; that does not include travel costs for witnesses or those related to court cases.
Valeska said the budget reduction is difficult for an office as busy as his to absorb. The cut leaves him receiving $641,504 from the state. Thirteen other districts receive more funding that District 20.
“I didn’t know the budget cut was coming,” Valeska said last week. “In the past they were good years. We were informed of the cuts when the governor said ‘proration.’
“They had given me a new circuit judge, Brad Mendheim, with no money. I need an assistant district attorney and a secretary. With a new judgeship, there will be more indictments, more paperwork, more filing, more cases and all that comes with this judgeship.”
Valeska said his office has never had a full-time investigator, which is also needed.
Valeska says he wonders every day how he will keep his office afloat.
“I haven’t decided where I am cutting back. Am I going to let employees go? I have to be able to make a payroll. I can’t wait until the last quarter. I don’t know what I am going to do because we are not going to be able to make payroll. We may park cars.”
Valeska noted that the court cost increase, if the governor signs it, is delayed 90 days. It could be well into the fall before any of those funds build up.
There is no doubt that Valeska’s office is a busy one. During 2007, a total of 9,571 new cases were filed in Houston and Henry counties. The local DA disposed of 9,573 cases that year. Cases which were resolved in 2007 rose 6 percent from the previous year. The cases are broken down as follows:
Criminal — 47 percent
Domestic — 18 percent
Juvenile — 15 percent
Civil — 11 percent
Child Support — 9 percent
According to the fiscal year 2008-09 budget submitted to the state last October by Valeska, the department operated in the 2007-08 fiscal year with $2.1 million in revenues.
Nearly one-third of the budget ($700,113) was state funds. Nearly another third ($510,000) was listed as “other revenue.”
Roughly half of this amount, or $310,000, came in as pre-trial diversion receipts last year from cases that didn’t make trial, but instead were handled as part of the pre-trial diversion program, established in 2003.
Pretrial diversion allows first-time, non-violent offenders to avoid prison time as long as they pay restitution to the victims.
Also included in these other revenues include $42,000 in condemnation funds for drug and other seizures; $12,000 from victim’s witness funds; and $9,800 in interest on accounts.
The DA had a $360,339 carryover from the previous year, and received $180,522 from the worthless check unit and another $223,543 in restitution recovery. The office collected $80,830 in court costs for the DA fund.
Actual expenditures for 07-08 were $1.4 million, creating an ending cash balance of $806,607.
During the current fiscal year, the department budgeted for $2.7 million in revenues. The current year’s expenditures are budgeted at $1.6 million, with increases expected across the board. An ending fund balance of more than $1 million is projected.
The largest increased expenditure from this year to next is expected to come in personnel costs, which Valeska has budgeted to rise by $100,000. Employee benefits will rise by $55,000. These cover the additional assistant DA Valeska was hoping to hire.
Budget figures show that personnel and benefits accounted for 68 percent of all expenditures in the district attorney’s office in 07-08. Another 9 percent ($127,911) went for travel and 11 percent ($167,000) are grants and benefits given away to various Victims of Crime and Leniency groups and the Wiregrass Angel House.
Valeska uses funds to assist a lot of agencies. He has purchased things like a $10 holster for a Southern Linc phone for a state trooper and paid the $375 registration fee for a sheriff’s deputy to attend the Alabama District Attorney’s Association conference in Orange Beach. Valeska has purchased a drug dog, shields for SWAT team members, shirts, and other items.
“I give to law enforcement, VOCAL, the Southeast Alabama Child Advocacy Center. ...,” he said. “Police officers are underfunded.”
He said money given to VOCAL is money well spent because many victims must deal with the trauma of what has happened to them.
“The VOCAL Angel House is just as important. There are more child abuse and rape cases than homicide cases every year. We need places to counsel these children and help them. I gave a lot of money for start-up to get that house going.”
“I won’t put a price on a murder victim’s family that needs help. They have to get up the next day and understand the court system, get counseling .... We stay with them throughout the trial. That is money well spent.”
Valeska acknowledges the contributions, including $53,000 to the Angel House, are a lot of money – “until you lose a loved one.”
“If I had known we were going into proration, I might not have given them as much, but I care about those victims.”
Hillman said by way of e-mail that any rise in court costs is necessary to keep district attorney offices functioning.
“I know of no other state agency that is as poorly funded by the state as are DAs,” he said. “When you consider that we (district attorneys) have to generate over 56 percent of our budget every year to keep the doors open, it is truly shameful.
“We are relegated to running a small business in our offices to make sure that rapists, murderers and drug dealers are brought to justice. In Fiscal Year 2008-09, DA Valeska will only receive 38.7 percent of his budget from the state of Alabama General Fund,” he said.
The state in turn tells local DA’s, Hillman interpreted, “in essence ’go find the rest if you want to continue providing the services that the state demands of you.’”
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Stories Coming Monday:
DA office’s travel expenses
What DA spends on salaries
Story Coming Tuesday:
DA given broad discretion to spend pretrial diversion funds
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Reader Reactions
Nice well reasearched story. If the DA is going to ask for more money, he should be accountable for how much he has and how he spends it. Do not get caught up in this man and his supporters theartrics. They thrive on fear and scare tactics. ANY DA doing his job would do the things this DA does, just with less self promotion and hot dogging. I put this DA in the same category as the Nyfong guy in North Carolina and he has become so self absorbed that he has lost site of what is right and wrong and is only concerned about spinning things to enhance his image. Does anybody think it curious he sent Gary Maxwell instead of apperaring in person to ask for the court cost increase. Yea…yea he was out of town. A judge sure went out of his way to make it clear they were not the ones asking for the increase. That is my money and your money…and I bet if we knew all the money facts it might hold some big surprises. Has the man become so intoxicated with power he thinks he is about scrutiny? The man has a million dollars in the bank and wants an increase? I think this man has not been held accountable in a long time and thank you Ms Ingram for a very informative and fair piece. Reminds me of the old days at the Eagle when reporters there had the courage to ask questions and not blindly echo what the politicians told them. Good Job!
WOW? A fund balance of more than $1 million is projected… and he wants MORE money? And since when is it his responsibility to take this money and give it away like he does? No wonder he has people on here defending him! I’d bet they are getting a cut of that money! Tighten your belt like everybody else and quit throwing money around like you are Friggin Robin Hood… stealing from one group and giving to another!!!
Poor Cicero must have been convicted of a crime he got caught committing. Do I taste a little bitterness towards the criminal justice system and the DA? Or has one of your relatives been behind bars? He and his office have prosecuted police officers. Don’t know about any judges but then again can you name a judge who has committed a crime while he has been in office?
“Did you really think that we want those laws to be observed?“ said Dr. Ferris. “We want them broken. You’d better get it straight that it’s not a bunch of boy scouts you’re up against - then you’ll know that this is not the age for beautiful gestures. We’re after p o w e r and we mean it. You fellows were pikers, but we know the real trick, and you’d better get wise to it. There’s no way to rule innocent men. The only p o w e r any government has is the p o w e r to crack down on criminals. Well, when there aren’t enough criminals, one makes them. One declares so many things to be a crime that it becomes impossible for men to live without breaking laws.* Who wants a nation of law-abiding citizens? What’s there in that for anyone? But just pass the kind of laws that can neither be observed nor enforced nor objectively interpreted - and you create a nation of law-breakers - and then you cash in on guilt. Now, that’s the system, Mr. Rearden, that’s the game and once you understand it, you’ll be much easier to deal with.“—Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged
—District Attorney Doug Valeska & Troy King share bed—
The district attorney can be the most influential person in county law enforcement because the office is the gatekeeper to the courts. While police investigate and arrest, it’s prosecutors who decide what crime a person should be charged with—if any. The office also plays a pivotal role in determining when police and judges should be prosecuted. How many police and judges has “big bad” Dist. Atty. Doug Valeska prosecuted?
Dist. Atty. Doug Valeska is the Troy King of the wiregrass. He has a reputation of playing politics with the criminal justice system. He “grandstands” all the time, especially when the person is “poor” they are easy prey for a individual like him. If you don’t make at least $500,000 or more a year you have no business voting for a person like him! Check into the—horror stories—about his brother: Assistant Attorney General Don Valeska. Don Valeska is one of AG Troy King’s “Village People.“
-Cicero
Too bad nobody can investigate Debbie I. on what she does all day at the Dothan Eagle. One day if she is a victim of a crime she will be glad to have Mr. Valeska on her side. Must of been a slow news month for her to have spent all her time investigating the man that helps our entire county including her.
This is a feeble attempt to take a shot at our District Attorney of 24 years and counting. Ever since I have lived in Houston County I have come to know Doug Valeska as the best thing that has happened to this city. Someone who is not willing to sacrifice his integrity or name to gain supporters and who treats everyone he comes in contact with as an equal is not something that you can find right around the corner. Luckily, we have somehow managed to keep him in our community due to the simple fact that he receives self-gratification for waking up day in and day out to go to battle for those who need them most-victims. Attorney General Troy King said last week at a VOCAL Candle Light Vigil, “There is no one who fights harder for victims’ rights and goes beyond the call of duty than Doug Valeska.” Is Debbie Ingram suggesting that the money Valeska is giving in support of Law Enforcement and Victims is just as good as money flushed down the drain? No amount of money can heal the broken hearts of victims but a little bit can go a long way and Valeska is one of the few making an effort. VOCAL Angel House ensures that no victim be forgotten or that their broken hearts never spend a day alone without support. These people have gone through more than any human being should have to experience in a lifetime so supplying them adequate resources is not a matter of money but a matter of caring. Valeska started the pre-trial diversion program to give first time offenders a second chance as long as they pay court cost and restitution to the victim. HIs office earns the money, shouldn’t they be able to spend it at their discretion without being criticized for helping Law Enforcement fight crime? According to this article, in 2007, Valeska’s office received 9,571 new cases and disposed of 9,573 cases. Sounds pretty efficient if you ask me. Sounds like money well spent on a productive staff and vital equipment required to aid law enforcement in bringing these criminals to trial. Doug Valeska is a fighter, someone who is not afraid to take a case to trial, someone who will fight for us when we think their is no hope, someone who honestly cares about the wounded, he is a man full of professionalism who I am proud to call our District Attorney. Wake up people, before you lose a District Attorney who honestly cares about this community and its well-being. This article is obviously nothing but political. Why doesnt Ingram mention how much money the Houston County Commission members who voted against hike are receiving? What are they doing with their money? Why are the other DA’s receiving all 20 dollars when our DA is receiving 9 dollars? God Bless our DA, his staff, Houston/Henry County Law Enforcement, and everyone involved with VOCAL Angel House, and the Child Advocacy Center.
I have lived here for over 25 years and will say I am very proud of the way our DA handles his circuits.If I would have known the economy was going to go bad I might have done some things differently to. I will never fault him for spending on law enforcement , vocal house or any other means possible to make sure we are safe from criminals. You mentioned speeders will have to pay more. Well here is a tip do not speed. Sounds like to me you may have got a speeding ticket. You can not put a price on a victims life whether or not it is a child or a grown up or an elderly person. Hope it never happens to me but if someone harmed my family I would hope Mr. Valeska would do everything possible for them.Now that I know he has to raise money for his office and these non profit groups I will do everything I can to help. God Bless Mr. Valeska and the other DA’s in the State of Alabama. I hope when you do your article on the salaries you compared them to the defense attorney’s salaries. I would bet they make alot more in a years time than any DA may make.


News editor Christie Kulavich guides you to fun events happening in the Wiregrass.
Sports writer Drew Champlin writes about the latest sports news from Troy University.
Reporters Lance Griffin and Debbie Ingram write about latest news released on the country music development planned for Houston County.

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