Pubdate: Sat, 22 Nov 2003 Source: Palm Beach Post, The (FL) Copyright: 2003 The Palm Beach Post Contact: http://www.gopbi.com/partners/pbpost/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/333 Author: Stebbins Jefferson, Palm Beach Post Columnist Cited: Sierra Tucson http://www.sierratucson.com/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Rush+Limbaugh HOW RUSH CAN BE A MODEL ADDICT On Monday, Rush Limbaugh returned to his syndicated radio show, still feisty and unrepentant. Showing extraordinary compassion for his human frailty, most of Mr. Limbaugh's fans remain loyal. Over the past five weeks, two polls showed that "more than 90 percent" of his 20 million "dittoheads" have "no diminished regard" because of his "drug dependency." His stations and advertisers, without exception, have held fast. Mr. Limbaugh can consider himself blessed to have so many people continuing to trust in him and to invest in his talent. Those of us who have encountered addiction among family members and other loved ones do not disparage his good fortune. We only wish that it could be spread around to other addicts -- or drug dependents -- who desperately need salvaging. You will recall that Mr. Limbaugh acknowledged his involvement in this typically American tale of woe on Oct. 10, when he announced on the air that he was leaving immediately after the program to go into rehab. He further explained that he had become hooked on prescription painkillers after experiencing recurring, intense back pain. Some insist that his decision to go public was motivated more by recent negative press reports than by moral scruples. His maid had told The National Enquirer that she sold him thousands of black-market pills -- Lorcet, hydrocodone and OxyContin ---- over a four-year period. Allegedly, he took as many as 30 OxyContin pills a day. Thus, any cynical conclusions drawn about his belated, unctuous admission of drug abuse are understandable. Remember, the most popular conservative radio voice in the nation declared in a 1995 interview, "The answer (to drug use) is to find the ones who are getting away with it, convict them and send them up the river." Arizona's ultra-exclusive Sierra Tucson rehab center is believed to be where Mr. Limbaugh sought treatment. The cost of the Sierra Tucson experience depends upon the number of days required to complete a prescribed treatment plan. The center's Web site states that the average cost for a patient can range from $33,000 to $48,000, not including "separately billed services/ancillary charges." Mr. Limbaugh was in treatment for four weeks. Blessed indeed is the man who can afford to pay for needed medical treatment of his disease. With no charges filed against him, it would seem that the supposedly detoxed radio host is back home-free in Palm Beach. Not so. Alas, another problem has surfaced. On Tuesday, ABC News reported that Mr. Limbaugh is being investigated for illegally laundering money to buy the prescription drugs and could be indicted for withdrawing cash in amounts just under $10,000 -- for supposedly as many as 30 to 40 times. Intentionally structuring financial transactions below that level to avoid bank reporting requirements put in place to thwart drug traffickers is a federal crime. A day later, Mr. Limbaugh vehemently denied this charge, conceding only that "when I went to get cash, I took a check to the bank... and they gave me the cash." For being able to withdraw his own money for his own purposes, he can be said to be twice blessed. And how fortunate he was not to have needed to mug anyone or rob any homes to support his habit. Hypothetically, his only mistake -- yet to be officially designated as a crime -- can be said to be illegal drug trafficking. If these observations seem a tad bitter, know that from my vantage point in a drug-infested community, I view the 52-year-old Mr. Limbaugh as a person not unlike the myriad young addicts in the ghetto. They, too, turned to drugs to assuage their pain -- emotional pain, adolescent angst, an overwhelming desire to escape the pressures of life -- all of which challenge moral strength to endure. Once addicted, for any reason, few can break the habit without treatment. It is much more likely that, for the nonviolent crime of drug addiction, far too many will be convicted and sent up the river -- as Mr. Limbaugh advised. Since acceptance of personal responsibility is his mantra, one hopes that for personal, nonpartisan reasons, he will reconsider that advice and advocate government-sponsored rehabilitative drug treatment for addicts. Studies show that it costs the public two-thirds less than putting the addict in prison. Would that Mr. Limbaugh and his dittoheads could have more regard for that approach - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake