Pubdate: Mon, 9 Dec 2002 Source: Maui News, The (HI) Contact: 2002 The Maui News Website: http://www.mauinews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2259 Author: Lila Fujimoto Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) RECOVERING WHILE INCARCERATED Inmates Get Honest In Jail Through New Maui Drug Court Program WAILUKU -- Sentenced to prison for stealing vehicles and possessing drugs, Erik Ekenberg is no stranger to incarceration. But the 35-year-old Kula man says his current stay at the Maui Community Correctional Center is unlike his prison terms of the past. For nearly three months, Ekenberg has undergone 12 hours a day of drug treatment while housed in Dorm 3, a 24-bunk jail dormitory designated only for male offenders participating in the Maui Drug Court. "It's helping me big time," Ekenberg said after a session on anger management last month. "I can't say if I will make it or not, but I'm going to give it my best shot." State officials praise the unique Drug Court program, started little more than a year ago for parole violators and inmates awaiting furlough. The program begins with 90 days of treatment while in jail for the felony offenders, who have agreed to undergo at least 15 months of drug treatment instead of facing further incarceration. Once inmates complete the treatment program in jail, they are released and continue for at least another year with treatment and supervision through the Drug Court. The Dorm 3 program is the only one of its kind in the state and one of only four such programs in the nation, said Lillian Koller, Maui Drug Court coordinator. She said the Maui program is modeled after one at the Los Angeles County Jail that has won national recognition. "It's a shift in the way you look at what incarceration is about," Koller said. "It has to be a recovery center." The annual budget for the Maui program is $100,000 to pay the salaries of two counselors who work overlapping shifts in Dorm 3 to provide the 12 hours of classes, group sessions and individual counseling from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily. Two jail guards are also assigned to the locked dormitory behind jail fences. "It's working," said Rick Fujihara, senior parole officer on Maui, who supervises half of the approximately 350 felons on parole here. "It's helping us to have more options for our parolees." Since MCCC's Dorm 3 was renovated and opened for Drug Court participants on Sept. 17, 2001, more than 20 parolees have been referred to the program, with at least five still in the dormitory and 12 doing well out of jail, Fujihara said. "Some hard-core people who I felt wouldn't have a chance are actually surprising me," Fujihara said. "We have been having some pretty positive outcomes from this program." Before Dorm 3 became an alternative, the cost and availability of drug treatment were hurdles for those who violated terms of their paroles, Fujihara said. He said failing to report to the parole officer and using crystal methamphetamine are the most common types of parole violations. "Crystal meth is the major problem that we're experiencing," Fujihara said. "Trying to tackle that monster is a day-to-day battle." An estimated 85 percent of inmates statewide have histories of drug abuse, said Albert Murashige, warden at MCCC, where 345 people ae incarcerated. He calls the Dorm 3 program "a step in the right direction, that we address the actual problem that's bringing people into our jails and prisons." Dorm 3 participants must have no history of violence within the past five years and must be approved by the Maui County prosecutor's office, which has rejected felons considered to be drug dealers. To participate, those facing revocation of their paroles agree to forgo a hearing within 60 days before the Hawaii Paroling Authority. Although parolees and inmates about to be furloughed are no longer under the court's control, those participating in Drug Court become subject to the jurisdiction of 2nd Circuit Court through an agreement with the state Department of Public Safety, Hawaii Paroling Authority and the court, Koller said. Some participants are paroled felons who have been arrested on new felony charges and are given the opportunity to have the new charges dismissed if they successfully complete the Drug Court program. For others, Maui Drug Court Judge Shackley Raffetto can recommend that the parole board consider an earlier date of discharge from parole. Because the judge can influence but not dictate some inmates' fate, "all they are doing is simply getting an opportunity to get clean," Koller said. The Drug Court jail dormitory operates under rules that are often stricter than in the rest of the jail. Activities, including cleanup and study time, take up much of the day. Dorm 3 inmates wear the same orange clothing but aren't allowed to associate with or even talk to those incarcerated in other parts of the jail. The culture of intimidation that rules in most prisons is banned in Dorm 3, said David Ramage, director of IMPACT-Maui, which runs Drug Court treatment services, including the jail program. "Any threats of violence and you're automatically gone," Ramage said. "There's no tolerance." In its first year of operation, 64 people went through the dorm, including some Drug Court participants who were ordered into custody for short periods for violating program rules. Thirty-one inmates spent full 90-day periods in the dorm. Among them were participants required to complete residential drug treatment. "It's worked just as we had hoped," said Koller, who would like to see the program expanded. In mid-November, 11 inmates were housed in the dorm. They included the first furlough inmate, a 37-year-old man serving a 10-year prison term for "ice" possession. After serving time in Halawa prison on Oahu and in an Oklahoma prison, he was returned to Maui in June to participate in the Drug Court. He spent the first 90 days in Dorm 3. "Dorm 3 is a controlled environment, it's like a self-governing environment," said the man, who asked that his name not be used for the sake of his family. "It's totally opposite of what we do in the regular population. It's all about practicing honesty." He still lives in the dorm but is released from the jail weekdays at 7:30 a.m. for five hours of program furlough. Even though he is about 13 months short of the five-year minimum term he was ordered to serve before being eligible for parole, Drug Court is giving him a chance to be released earlier, the inmate says. With no driver's license, he walks from the Wailuku jail to IMPACT-Maui offices in the old Kress building on Main Street. He spends the morning in classes and counseling sessions, learning what he can do to prevent relapsing, before walking back to jail. "I pretty much live in humility," he said. "I can be a team player more than a person that always takes charge." He said he thinks about how "ice" has destroyed lives on Maui. "It's kind of painful cause I know I played a part in that," he said. "I wish there's a remedy you can give them that would stop this from happening." When he was using the drug, "I never saw the destruction in my own mind," he said. While the man is at the IMPACT-Maui offices, where most Drug Court participants go for drug tests and counseling, case worker Ronny Santiago is leading a class on anger management in Dorm 3. "On a daily basis, we're going to be faced with circumstances and situations that test our emotions," Santiago tells the inmates, who sit in twos and threes behind desks stretched between two rows of bunk beds. "The key is you got to have a plan." He suggests "10 deep breaths" as one possibility for an inmate who says, "I can go from calm to rage in 10 seconds." Jacob Carroll, 29, who has been in and out of prison for violating his parole, said he has "found a way that I can recover" during his two months in Dorm 3. "It's like heaven up here, actually," he said. Ekenberg spent time in Halawa Prison on Oahu where "there's no rehabilitation whatsoever. You're living in a warehouse." He did complete a drug treatment program at the Waiawa correctional facility on Oahu before being released on parole last year. After returning to Maui, "I went right back into using," he said. "All my charges stemmed from drugs." Facing revocation of his parole as well as new charges for felonies, including the theft of a tractor found on his property earlier this year, he sought admission into Drug Court. "This is my last chance," said Ekenberg, whose drug use began when he smoked marijuana at age 5. "I've used for the last 30 years, so I need help. And that's what I'm getting here. I got to change everything." Once released from Dorm 3, Ekenberg and other felons will get help with the transition, continuing with treatment, testing and monitoring for at least another year through the Drug Court, Ramage said. "'We stick with them," Koller said. "That's a key difference." Ekenberg said one reason he wants to stop using drugs is for his daughter, whom he has watched grow up through prison visits since 1996. "I'm just tired of coming back to prison," he said. "I've got to stop it." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk