Pubdate: Wed, 11 Jul 2001 Source: Indianapolis Star (IN) Copyright: 2001 Indianapolis Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.starnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/210 Author: Vic Ryckaert JUVENILE DRUG COURT SEES POSITIVE RESULTS Study Finds Majority Of Youths In Program Are Reducing Drug Use, Doing Better In School. By Vic Ryckaert Indianapolis Star July 11, 2001 Marion County's 10-month-old drug court for youths is showing signs of success, officials say. A preliminary report by Indiana University researcher Kevin Whiteacre suggests 82 percent of the youths in the program have reduced their drug use, 72 percent have increased school attendance and 67 percent have improved school performance. Those numbers are no fluke, said Wanda King, a U.S. Department of Justice consultant who travels the country helping communities start juvenile drug courts, and who advised local officials. "It's really a marriage of the court system and treatment," King said. "Court alone wasn't working, and treatment alone wasn't working." More than 140 juvenile drug court programs already are operating in the country, she said. In Marion County, youths 12 to 17 are enrolled in counseling and have weekly drug tests. Juveniles and their parents appear before a judge twice a week; if the youths miss classes or fail a urine test, consequences are swift. "It's the immediacy of the consequences; that's what makes the real difference," said Jill Kirkhoff-Alerding, coordinator for Community Counseling Center, which provides counseling for the program. The program has accepted 138 juveniles. So far, 33 have graduated, 73 are still in treatment and 32 have been expelled. Those who successfully complete treatment have their criminal cases dismissed. Juvenile drug crime has increased 479 percent in Marion County since 1985. More than half of the youths locked up in the Juvenile Detention Center test positive for drug use. Despite reports of the rising popularity of Ecstasy and other club drugs, pot is the substance of choice for Marion County juveniles. The study found 69 percent of juveniles in the drug court were arrested on charges of possessing marijuana. Possession of drug paraphernalia was second at 16 percent, and alcohol offenses ranked third at 7 percent. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart