Pubdate: Wed, 09 Jul 2003 Source: Press Journal (FL) Contact: 2003, The E.W. Scripps Co. Website: http://www1.tcpalm.com/tcp/press_journal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2977 Author: Jayne Hustead, staff writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) TROUBLED PAST, BRIGHT FUTURE New Court Program Offers Chance For Clean Record INDIAN RIVER COUNTY -- Christi Hart stood before the judge Tuesday in her blue-flowered graduation dress, her nervousness and excitement clear. Behind the 33-year-old single mother was a courtroom filled with lawyers, law-enforcement officers, government officials, mental-health counselors and a collection of family, friends and other well-wishers. The occasion was the first-ever Indian River County Drug Court graduation. And Hart was the first graduate. Hart, of Vero Beach, was arrested May 25, 2002, after buying cocaine from an undercover police officer in the 1000 block of 10th Court Southwest. When she got out of jail June 19, 2002, she was homeless and confused, she said. The drug-court program, newly launched in late May 2002 by Circuit Judge Cynthia L. Cox, turned out to be her salvation. Mandated by the state Legislature in 2001, drug court is available only to first-time, nonviolent drug offenders. Participants must complete a rigorous three-phase program of group and individual counseling, weekly drug testing, almost daily Alcoholics Anonymous meetings and frequent court appearances. The reward for those who succeed is a clean record; the criminal charges against them dropped. Tuesday, Cox signed a court order dismissing a cocaine possession charge against Hart and presented her with a certification of completion. "You have come a long way," Cox said, handing her pictures of how badly she looked the day she was arrested and how much better she looks now. Outside the courtroom before the ceremony, Hart explained how she was overwhelmed at first by all she was being asked to do in the program. Her drug-abuse counselor, Cathie Ganey, of New Horizons, told her "to calm down and take one step at a time and eventually she would see a routine develop," Hart said. And she did see it. "Life became more and more simple ... and easier," said Hart, who within two months had found a job and a place to live with her three children ages 13, 10 and 8. Ganey taught her to be organized, "to live life on life's terms ... and to focus on the solution, not the problem," she said. Her full-time employer, Winn-Dixie, saw her through, giving her Tuesdays off to go to court, she said. And her co-workers in the grocery chain's deli department helped get her to her drug court appointments regularly. "They made sure I was a success," she said. Likewise, the support of her mother, sister, boyfriend and children strengthened her resolve. "My whole family has been restored through this," she said. "I'm not proud of how I got here (in court), but I am proud of how I'm leaving here," she said. Two other drug-court participants were set to graduate with Hart, but have relapsed in the five weeks since graduation was scheduled, Ganey said. They remain in the program. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin