Pubdate: Sat, 05 Oct 2002 Source: Palm Beach Post, The (FL) Copyright: 2002 The Palm Beach Post Contact: http://www.gopbi.com/partners/pbpost/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/333 Author: Stebbins Jefferson COMMON PROBLEM, COMMON HELP Families with a member adrift in a cloud of drug addiction will have difficulty seeing "a silver lining" amid the all-encompassing misery. Yet in reference to Noelle Bush's drug offenses, lawyer Catherine O'Neil of the New York-based Legal Action Center assures us such a lining exists. Because of the prominence of the governor's daughter, all legal rulings related to her case -- she was charged with trying to fraudulently buy a prescription drug and sent to drug court -- could establish a needed legal standard for respecting patients' confidentiality during drug and alcohol treatment. As every parent knows, drugs are an equal-opportunity enslaver, without respect for economic condition, social status or racial identity. Because Ms. Bush, 25, is the daughter of Florida's governor and niece of the president, however, every aspect of how the legal system handles her case is being scrutinized and compared with the treatment of others who also are mired in drug addiction but lack social prominence. Ms. Bush's plight became public internationally when she was arrested Jan. 29, in Tallahassee for trying to buy Xanax, an anti-anxiety drug, with a forged prescription. She asked for and received transfer to the Center for Drug-Free Living, a small rehabilitation facility in Orlando, where the clients include about 30 other women, many of them poor single mothers. During treatment, Ms. Bush must make periodic appearances before Circuit Judge Reginald Whitehead, who runs the drug court for Orange and Osceola counties. He will decide whether she will remain in the rehabilitation program, be released as having successfully completed treatment, or be declared in violation of the drug court agreement and sent back to criminal court in Leon County to face the original felony charges. In July, after the center staff reported to the judge that Ms. Bush had been caught with prescription drugs in her possession, she was sentenced to three days in jail and returned to rehab. On Sept. 9, another rehab center client, complaining that the "princess" gets caught repeatedly but never is punished, called police to report that Noelle Bush had a 0.2-gram of rock cocaine in her shoe. When officers arrived, however, a center staff member, after initially offering to confirm the offense, tore up the affidavit on the advice of her superiors. Prosecutors went to court, seeking to force four workers at the center to cooperate with the investigation. On Monday, Orange County Circuit Judge Belvin Perry Jr. ruled that staff members do not have to testify, because federal privacy laws protect patients who are residents in a drug treatment center and also are under the supervision of a drug-court judge. This ruling has been declared too lenient by many Floridians with drug- addicted relatives who were summarily sentenced to jail for criminal drug offenses without having been accorded the option of drug treatment over incarceration. These critics argue that Ms. Bush's treatment affirms a double standard of justice that winks when a person of status is addicted. Admittedly, that accusation has some merit, but in this instance, Judge Perry has not winked at status or power politics on either side. He made a just decision that acknowledges, as the law should, the inescapable reality that drug addiction is a cyclical illness. Of addicts, the judge wrote, "If they were able to permanently abstain from using illicit substances without suffering any relapses, then they would not be drug addicts." He correctly noted that the Legislature's "explicit intent" in creating the drug court is that eligible drug offenders be diverted from the criminal justice system into treatment- based drug-court programs. (Note: Eligibility for rehabilitation seems to be the most critical issue.) Hence, if there is any double standard at work in this situation, the fault lies not in Judge Perry's ruling about patient privacy but in the inequitable way in which one citizen is criminally prosecuted for drug offenses while another is offered a chance for rehabilitation through a drug court. No significant silver lining to our drug problems exists until the justice system provides all addicts an equal opportunity to salvage their lives. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex