Pubdate: Fri, 14 Apr 2000 Source: Illawarra Mercury (Australia) Copyright: 2000 Illawarra Newspapers Contact: http://mercury.illnews.com.au/ PRISON DETOX SCHEME IN BID TO BEAT CRIME Prisoners on heroin will be given the controversial drug Naltrexone to help break their addictions under a series of radical NSW Government trials announced yesterday. Corrective Services Minister Bob Debus said the program was designed to ensure inmates were drug-free before they were released back into the community. It was believed to be the first of its kind in Australia. He said the trial would also include the use of Buprehorphine, which has yet to be approved by federal health authorities, and a long-lasting methadone alternative called LAAM. If successful, the programs would help break the cycle of drug abuse and crime, Mr Debus said. "Over 70 per cent of prisoners are jailed because they have committed a drug-related offence," he told Parliament. "Drug-free former inmates will mean one thing: less crime, less housebreaking, less crime in the streets." Mr Debus said the trials were initiated in response to recommendations from last year's Drug Summit. Under the program, Naltrexone would be given to about 450 inmates at Parklea Correctional Centre over a two-year period from August. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson