Pubdate: Fri, 02 Feb 2001 Source: Gloucester Daily Times (MA) Copyright: 2001 Essex County Newspapers, Incorporated. Contact: http://www.gloucestertimes.com/ Author: Gail Mountain TIME TO FACE DRUG ADDICTION HEAD ON I've been thinking about a drunken driving case since early January and I haven't been able to get it off of my mind because the Manchester defendant, if found guilty, is a perfect candidate for the two-year, lock-up addiction facility I'd love to see built. On Jan. 12, a Times headline read: "Driver had long history of arrests: Manchester man's addiction to alcohol at center of case." The man in question admitted to having a long-term problem with alcohol. Now in his 60s, he's had nine or 10 drunken driving charges, yet he was picked up one more time driving drunk, driving without a license and driving an uninsured car. Based on information gleaned from the article, the odds are good that he is not a "bad" man, i.e., the stereotypical wino sitting on the curb, guzzling his drug of choice from a brown paper bag or the stereotypical heroin addict shooting dope into his veins in a shooting gallery located in New York City, assuming that's how we define bad. I imagine he is a typical area addict who has, as does many a respectable citizen, a family and a job and is just so incredibly sick he has not been able to help himself, nor has the law been able to stop him from being a risk to himself and/or the society that surrounds him. In fact, at the time of his current bust, he was on probation for a drunken driving conviction in a Cambridge court. When we speak of addicts and who they are, it's always helped me to keep Judy Garland in my mind as an example of a non-stereotypical addict. Judy was a real person, a daughter, a wife, a mom and a woman with a gift from God in her talent. She helps me put my perspective of who an addict might be in its proper place. She also helps me keep in mind that, more often than not, an addict's history has to be taken into consideration when society and/or the law are making judgments. In Judy's case, she was addicted to pills -- uppers to work and downers to sleep -- as a child by her own mother. She was a full-blown addict at the age of 15. By all accounts, Judy wasn't a bad person, yet toward the end of her 47 years on this earth, she was a penniless addict who would have been a homeless woman on the streets if it weren't for her wealthy friends who gave her a roof over her head. It's impossible to conceive of Judy Garland being locked up in a prison with murderers, child molesters and rapists, is it not? Of our current and more local defendant, the Beverly prosecutor said, "He is someone who simply won't stop driving drunk ... we believe him to be a danger to the lives and safety of people on the road." The defendant is being held on $10,000 bail, and if he's convicted he will receive a mandatory one-year sentence in jail. He could receive five years in jail. His lawyer said his client acknowledges he's an alcoholic and he urged the judge to allow him to seek treatment, instead of high bail. He also said his client had been trying to arrange a stay in a rehabilitation center, but had been unsuccessful so far. It's a point that wasn't explored in the article, but anyone who has dealt with someone who needs to be hospitalized for addiction knows there are not enough beds to handle the problem. And even if there were, those same people also know that a three-to five-to 10- to 30-day detoxification and/or rehabilitation process is not typically successful in stopping an addict from using. At this point in the discussion, the philosophical question, "Is addiction an illness or a crime?" tends to rear its ugly head. After a lifetime of observing addiction, I've come to the conclusion it's both. It's an illness that, more often than not, leads to the addict committing criminal behavior; whether that criminal behavior is driving drunk or stealing for dope is neither here nor there. After a good 25 years of jailing hundreds of addicts, with probably about an 80 percent recidivism rate and probably about a 1-percent recovery rate, it seems I'd be on the safe side if I said it doesn't work. So, what to do with the Judy Garlands of our world, for they are indeed a danger, first and foremost to themselves but also to the rest of us? In all fairness, it does need to be said that in Judy's time, the mother who addicted her and the studio that supported her habit and even added to it when she needed to lose weight knew nothing about addiction. That's not the case today, though. Today we understand that if you use certain chemicals, the odds are good that you will become an addict. We also understand that who will and who will not become an addict is totally unpredictable -- it's the luck of the draw, so to speak. It's not a recipe for mandatory jail. It is a case for coming to terms with the fact that addiction is an illness and a crime and should be treated as such. How much longer will it take this society to build its first lock-up rehabilitation center, for that is where our Manchester neighbor belongs, for his sake and ours? - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake