Pubdate: Sun, 19 Oct 2003 Source: Hattiesburg American (MS) Copyright: 2003 Hattiesburg American Contact: http://www.hattiesburgamerican.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1646 Author: Nikki Davis Maute, American Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) JUDGES: DRUG COURTS NOT SOFT ON CRIME LUCEDALE - The fog of living with a 20-year drug habit is slowly lifting for Lisa Kyle. "I never remember a sober life before drug court," the 28-year-old Lucedale resident said Thursday as she joined her husband Tommy and a dozen other George and Greene County residents at a weekly meeting with 19th Circuit Judge Kathy King Jackson of Pascagoula. Kyle's use of drugs and alcohol started when she was 8. By the time she was 13 she used drugs - marijuana being her drug of choice - every day. It stopped last November. Two weeks away from a first-year anniversary, the George and Greene counties drug court has kept 22 people out of the state prison system and saved the state up to $400,000 in jail costs. In a state corrections system with a $300 million budget, that may not seen like a lot, said Circuit Judge Keith Starrett of McComb, whose 14th Circuit Court district covers Pike, Lincoln and Walthall counties. Starrett started Mississippi's first drug court in 1999. But Starrett said when the 19th Circuit's $1 million plus savings for incarceration costs are added along with other drug courts around the state and those that are in the planning stages, it will make an impact. The financial savings and rescuing drug offenders from a life of addiction and incarceration is what Circuit Judge Bob Helfrich hopes for when he starts a drug court for Forrest and Perry counties. Unlike other drug courts, though, Helfrich is getting help from a private foundation. He recently received a $459,000 grant from the Hattiesburg-based Asbury Foundation. The grant is the envy of Starrett and Jackson. Jackson said she got a one-time $50,000 grant from the attorney general. She's getting $45,000 a year from George and Greene counties. Helfrich approved the circuit's drug court two weeks ago and is screening five people to be the first participants. He is in the process of hiring a coordinator. "I've heard nothing but positive comments about what we are doing," Helfrich said. For the Kyles, facing years in prison after they were arrested on drug charges, the chance to stay out of prison was worth the requirements of drug court. They became the first two members of Judge Jackson's fledging drug court. While Lisa Kyle relapsed four months into the program, she said she picked herself back up and has been clean for eight months. "We got six year suspended sentences and if we don't complete drug court we're going to jail," Kyle said. "We're going to make it." Kyle is working as a cook in town; her husband is working a construction job in Mobile. Boot Camp, Day Camp Jackson operates the George and Greene program out of a small white building with green shutters - painted by the program participants. The building is near the county courthouse, nearly hidden behind the justice court building. There's no sign up, nor benches outside the building, but that's changing today. Drug court participants were to spend this afternoon building picnic benches as part of their required community service. Jackson's court is a mixture of boot camp and day camp, of praise and discipline. Fourteen participants crowded into a small office Thursday with chairs squeezed between shelves holding court records and old law library books. Jackson sat behind a desk part of the time and then gave her desk to the participant speaker and stood casually in the door. She was not wearing robes. But don't let the smile or the lack of robes fool anyone. One of the participants failed to show up Thursday. The judge issued a bench warrant for his arrest. Coordinator Joanne Byrd spent much of Thursday night tracking him down. A newcomer to the program made her first meeting Thursday, but had failed to call the coordinator Monday. Jackson informed her she would spend the weekend in jail. But the 22 participants of the 25 who've remained in the program have forged a bond of friendship that's evident in their laughter, their teasing and their concern for each other. Thursday, everyone passed the drug test and everyone - except the newcomer - had a job. It was a high-five time for the group. Jobs are critical. Everyone in Jackson's court works. They're on a buddy system - each assigned a buddy - and they are watched and monitored daily. They have to work, spend at least an hour a week in the library reading, attend weekly alcohol and narcotics anonymous meetings, parenting classes on Saturdays and be drug tested at least twice a week. Participant William Darden found out last week there are still some misconceptions about the drug court program when he was stopped at a road block. "I thought they were going to harass me which they usually do," Darden said. "I was waiting for them to start some mess. I was going to call the judge." And Jackson would have welcomed a call for Darden. It's the hand-on approach from judges that sets this program apart. "Hey, I got the judge's number on speed dial," said Tommy Kyle, much to Jackson's delight. Darden, 25, said the law officer at the road block wanted to know how he got out of a 20-year sentence. "I told them I was in drug court," he said. "They didn't believe me. They kept asking me who I knew." Darden said when they asked to search his car, he didn't break into a sweat. "It was a good feeling not to worry about what they would find," Darden said. He said people in the community are still shocked that he has turned his life around. Not Ashamed Each week, one of the participants talks about his week. Thursday, it was Michael Mills' time. "This program has improved the way I live, he said "It has improved me." Mills, 31, said he talks about the court at the auto repair shop where he works. "People will come in and start talking about dope heads and I say 'wait a minute, I'm a dope head.' We are not all bad. We are not all out there committing crimes. Some people are ashamed to be in drug court, but I'd rather tell someone about drug court than be having to give them my penitentiary number," he said. Jackson reminded participants that the community is watching all the participants. "They started out suspicious of what was going on," she said. "They thought it was a free ride and that all of you ought to be in the penitentiary." In the five years since Starrett started the state's first drug court, he estimates the 60 inmates who would have gone to prison saved the state more than $1 million. That figure is based on a $20,000 a year cost to house a state inmate. Starrett said people need to understand that a drug court is not a free ride for people caught in crimes. "It's not a 'hug-a-thug' program," he said. "It's not an easy way out of criminal trouble nor is a plea bargaining tool. We are not soft on crime." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk