Pubdate: Tue, 04 Nov 2003 Source: Greenwood Commonwealth (MS) Copyright: 2003 Greenwood Commonwealth Contact: http://www.gwcommonwealth.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1541 Author: John Martin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) DRUG COURT HAS ITS FIRST GRADUATE AG Among Judges, Counselors, Others To Help Celebrate Richmond's Recovery Every Thursday in the 4th Judicial District is "good news Thursday," Circuit Judge Betty Sanders says. The news was particularly sweet this Thursday as Harvey Richmond became the first person to graduate from the district's drug court program. "Our drug court participants are tested two to three times a week," said Sanders, who manages the program in Leflore County. "That means when we have Good News Thursday, every participant in our drug court is clean and sober. Today is Good News Thursday." There was standing room only in the west courtroom of the Leflore County Courthouse as about two dozen clean and sober participants joined judges, attorneys, counselors, narcotics agents and state Attorney General Mike Moore to celebrate Richmond's recovery. The years have been long and torturous, Richmond said, since he entered his descent into drug addiction, a moment he can pinpoint exactly. "On a Saturday night at Second Avenue and 10th Street in Miami 45 years ago, I was introduced to marijuana by someone I considered a very good friend, but it's been downhill ever since," he recalled. After his arrest on a cocaine charge in September 2001, Richmond, 60, opted to enter the drug court program rather than face a conviction on the charge. All first-time offenders who have committed non-violent drug-related crimes are eligible for the program, which suspends the sentence they would otherwise serve. If participants break their pact to stay off all drugs and alcohol, they face prison time. Those weren't necessarily easy terms for Richmond. He was in a bad way when police found him, Sanders said. "They were afraid to put handcuffs on him because he was so thin and frail." Richmond had a long history of drug abuse and little success with treatment programs. But none of them did what the drug court program has accomplished, he said. In a voice that sounds both exhausted from where he has been and relieved to be where he is now, Richmond told his admirers "drugs are a conning, baffling thing. It's a sickness. It brings out a badness, and I'm going to stay away from it." Moore said it will take everyone who was in the courtroom Thursday and a concerted community effort to make sure that resolution is kept. Applauding the drug court's efforts, Moore said the program depends on people with courage and insight. "This is something that really is hopeful," he said. "This is something that really is wonderful. This is something that really is much different than what usually happens in a courtroom." Drug court focuses on treatment, not punishment. Making the connection that addiction is a sickness has been the program's strength, Washington County Circuit Judge Margaret Carey-McCray. "Addiction is a disease, and it responds like any other disease to treatment," said Carey-McCray. Participants initially enter a formal intensive treatment program - in Greenwood, Life Help's Denton Center - and then go through an 18-month monitoring period during which they face regular urine tests and court visits. Carey-McCray is credited with bringing the concept to the 4th District, which covers Leflore, Sunflower and Washington counties. The court, one of three in the state, began accepting applications about two years ago and, funded by the three counties and a $50,000 grant from Moore's office, went into operation in January 2002. This year, a $500,000 federal grant came through. Now, there are 45 participants, and drug tests for every one of them came back negative Thursday. Despite the support and success, Sanders said the idea of drug court still meets some resistance. "When you try to start something new, it's just not easy," said the judge. "People don't understand. They say, 'You're turning the criminals out on the street. It's not a good idea. You're soft on crime. Lock them up and throw away the key.'" But while drug court might not be a conventional idea, it's the right one, Moore says. "There will be those who say that's soft on crime. This is smart on crime, not soft on crime," he said. Criminalizing drug addiction has led Mississippi to the distinction of incarcerating more of its citizens per capita than any other state. More than one-third of the state's inmates are serving time directly related to substance abuse charges, and two-thirds of the offenses are indirectly related to drugs, according to Moore's estimates. "We lock more people up per capita than any other state in America," he said. "That's not something to be proud of. We want to be last in that category." Drugs tear families apart, Moore acknowledged, but so do prison sentences. The convicted leave behind small children, husbands, wives and other family members, he explained. "There are tears," he said. "And really what it is is not an investment in success, but an investment in failure." Richmond attributes his success in the program to a loving, supportive family. His nephew, the Rev. David Henderson of Greenwood, was his sponsor throughout the treatment. Drug abuse afflicts more than the addicted; family members suffer too, Henderson said. "You can't be all you can be," he explained. "You can't eat as well. No matter how much you do, there's still a void because of what your family member is going through." Henderson said drug court shows that the law can be sympathetic to the human condition. "It shows the law is concerned about mankind - mankind not just as it is affected by criminals, but mankind which needs to help and be helped." Sanders said she was glad to see another family made whole again. She was glad also that the good news didn't go unnoticed. "We want you to see, hear, know, understand and learn that we are restoring families and saving lives," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin