Pubdate: Sun, 29 Jun 2003 Source: Birmingham News, The (AL) Copyright: 2003 The Birmingham News Contact: http://al.com/birminghamnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/45 Author: Stan Bailey, staff writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) NONVIOLENT FELONS GET NEW CHANCE THROUGH COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS Norman Askew remembers the code of street justice he used to live by: "If somebody violates you, you're supposed to take his head off." That was before the recovering addict and hustler from Birmingham's Southside went to prison on a 40-year sentence for killing a man in Indiana in a drug deal gone bad. Now he works to keep other people from going down the same path in their lives. He directs the outreach program for addicts at Sixteenth Street Baptist Church and heads the community restitution division of Treatment Alternatives to Street Crime. That group falls under the umbrella of Jefferson County Community Corrections, one of 19 such programs that serve about 1,200 nonviolent convicts in 21 Alabama counties. Gov. Bob Riley and the state Sentencing Commission are pushing to expand community corrections programs to all 67 counties as a way to ease jail and prison crowding, to punish nonviolent convicts somewhere other than prisons, and to reserve secure lockups for violent criminals. More than 1,000 inmates in state prisons qualify as nonviolent felons for purposes of the programs, according to David Horn, a state research analyst. As Ralph Hendrix, program manager of TASC, puts it, "Community corrections is separating the folks you are scared of from those you are simply mad at." The idea is that people who steal lawn mowers and credit cards should be treated differently from those who shoot people, he said. "You save hospital beds for heart attacks," said Hendrix. "That's what we've got to do with prisons and community corrections." Programs can include work release, victim restitution, community service, electronic monitoring, drug testing and treatment, educational services and misdemeanor probation, said Foster Cook, director of Jefferson County Community Corrections and an associate professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. The state prison system pays programs a subsidy of $5 to $15 a day for diverting nonviolent felons from prisons, said Steve Hayes, executive assistant to Prison Commissioner Donal Campbell. Inmates pay 25 percent of their gross wages toward costs of the program, 10 percent to pay court costs and 10 percent as restitution to victims. Outreach ministry: Askew said he traveled a long way through drugs, alcohol and violence before he found his way to Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, where he now heads the Wall Builder outreach ministry to recovering addicts. In his job as community restitution director of TASC, he places many recovering drug and alcohol addicts and other nonviolent offenders in business, community service and other jobs throughout Birmingham. He sends some offenders to Sixteenth Street and other churches for community service, "but while they're doing that, the pastor talks with them," he said. Reginald Green got a job, with Askew's help, at a Precision Tune on Valley Avenue. Green had been in and out of prison twice for drug and property crimes when Askew told him he needed to get his life in order, and Green decided to try. "Today I'm buying a house. I'm married. I got a little girl. She's 5. Everything's going better," Green said. "I come to work every day. I work 10 hours a day, six days ... . I feel a whole lot different. ... I really don't have to look over my shoulder and worry." Rick Martin, a supervisor at Precision Tune, said he knows the streets and might have gone down the same road as Green except for the help of people who cared about him. So he's glad to hire offenders Askew says are trying to go straight. "I kind of feel like it's the right thing to do, to reach out to people that are just like I was," Martin said. The Rev. James A. Gibson Jr., pastor of Greater Temple Missionary Baptist Church in Elyton Village, two blocks from Legion Field, said reaching out to offenders has been good for his community, too. "They've helped me do everything from tend the yard to paint classrooms to change light bulbs and ceiling tiles to even doing some secretarial work," said Gibson. "This area here was a place where drugs were sold. It was an area where prostitutes walked the street," he said. "You will notice that there is no graffiti on this building. There are no broken windows. There is very little trash. What I'm getting at is that the community has embraced the church, and these people tend to see the church as their church." Drug, mental court: In Jefferson County, nonviolent offenders are directed to report to the community corrections program for an assessment as a condition of bond. Programs under the community corrections umbrella include Judge Pete Johnson's drug court, Judge Virginia Vinson's mental health court and a battery of educational, training and treatment services. During a recent session in Johnson's court, a man in jail clothes stood before the judge. "Here's what you're going to do," Johnson told him sternly. "You're going to get out of jail at 7:30 a.m. tomorrow and you're going to stay at Shepherd's Fold. You've got to stay there and do what they say. You've got to make this work." Shepherd's Fold is a residential facility that provides food, shelter and clothing for up to 36 male offenders trying to get back on their feet. Later, as Johnson waited to cross the street for lunch, a woman ran up to him, called him "Mr. Johnson," and thanked him for helping her get off drugs. "Prison doesn't make people better," Johnson said later. "Most of the time, I think there's a good chance it'll make them worse." Since 1996, when Johnson's drug court opened, 1,263 participants have graduated and 323 have gone on to prison. Offenders make routine court appearances, have frequent drug testing, perform community service and meet any other requirements Johnson deems necessary. If all goes well, their charges can be dismissed at the end of the program. Westley Marshall, 24, a drug offender who pleaded guilty in Johnson's court, said that if not for the program, he would have headed to prison for 10 years. Instead, he works at a recycling center on Second Avenue North, sorting plastic bottles and newspapers. The program required him to get his GED and driver's license, complete 100 hours of community service, stay employed for a year, pay a fee of $25 a month and court costs of $1,500, submit to random urine analysis and stay on the Intensive Outpatient Program at UAB for a year. Vinson's mental health court, the only one in the state, works much like Johnson's court, except charges aren't dropped at the end of the program and participants are required to stay on medications their doctors prescribe. "They'll take their medication until they start feeling better, then they think they don't need it anymore," said Vinson. "They go off of it, and then it's just a cycle that keeps on." TASC workers develop treatment plans for each participant and monitor their progress, Vinson said. Diverting felons: Horn said diverting felons to community corrections in Jefferson County has allowed the county to delay plans for a $50 million jail. Jefferson County Commissioner Gary White said money paid toward Foster Cook's community corrections initiatives has been well-spent. "He is down here getting people out of the jails ... . Without that, we would be in a heck of a mess," White said. The county is considering building a minimum-security jail to house inmates at night and let them work during the day, White said. In Shelby County, the community corrections program includes a 100-bed residential center and a work-release program that not only is self-supporting, but also has returned thousands of dollars to the county treasury. Montgomery's new program is tackling a backlog of 450 inmates in a jail designed for 305. In DeKalb County, the community corrections program goes a step further, not only diverting felons from prison, but removing some from prison and placing them in community corrections assignments. "We have come to the realization in this circuit that restoration of another human being is very important to all of us," said DeKalb County District Attorney Mike O'Dell. The DeKalb program has about 100 offenders each on community corrections and drug court programs, and about 2,500 on other court referrals. John T. Rice, DeKalb's first community corrections participant, today is a court referral officer in the program. "The program saved my life," said Rice, who had several drug possession and burglary convictions, and alcohol and drug addictions. "I was drinking every day until I passed out at night," he said. "I started selling drugs to feed the alcohol and drug habit. And I got caught in 1993." Doug Parker, director of DeKalb's community corrections program, himself a recovering alcoholic and drug addict, decided to give Rice another chance. He took it and succeeded. When Rice had been sober for three years, Parker hired him to work in the community corrections program. "I knew he knew what he was talking about," Rice said. "The people in this program actually cared about what happened to me." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin