Pubdate: Sun, 05 Dec 2004 Source: Bradenton Herald (FL) Copyright: 2004 Bradenton Herald Contact: http://www.bradenton.com/mld/bradentonherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/58 Author: Aimee Juarez, Herald Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) DRUG COURT HELPS OFFENDERS CLEAN UP Manatee County's Version Of The Program Has Had A Success Rate Of Nearly 90 Percent MANATEE - Deborah Platt knew she hit rock bottom days after she bonded out of the Sarasota County jail. Locked inside a jail cell again three days after her release in December 2002 after being caught buying drugs from an undercover officer, Platt came to realize how her 14-year addiction to crack cocaine and alcohol had ruined her life, her career and her family. Now she had a choice - serve jail time for the drug charge or go drug court to break the addiction. "If I would have done my time, I would have been back out on the streets doing whatever it took to get what I wanted," she said. "It was a revolving door." Platt's case was assigned to drug court, a special intervention program that grants extensive supervision and treatment for drug-addicted offenders. Participants like Platt undergo long-term counseling and treatment and make frequent court appearances to make sure they can kick the habit. Ten months after successfully completing the year-long program, the 37- year-old feels accomplished as she works to rebuild her once-shattered life. "I had the willingness to do whatever was suggested to me to complete the program," she said. "That program had all the resources I needed. I had no one, and they cared about me, they saw me for who I was." Drug Court Successes If the program is successfully completed, a judge may reduce the charges, set aside a sentence, or lessen penalties, according to Alfred James, director of Manatee County Drug Court. "The success rate is determined by rearrest," James said. "Once they complete the program, we track arrests. If people still continue to use drugs at some level, they're going to get in more trouble again." Overall, the Manatee County Drug Court has had an 88 percent success rate, according to James. Some do return. "It depends on the circumstance," James said. "If we can help them get rid of the addiction, we can lessen the chance of them committing another crime that can hinder their lives." Participants can stay with the program for an average of about 15 months. They need to have a job or be enrolled in school to take part in the treatment, and are subject to routine urine tests to check for drug use. The conditions are set to meet the requirements a judge outlines for each participant, which becomes a case handled by a felony probation officer. Carrol Dzina, local circuit administrator for the state Department of Corrections in Sarasota, explained that participants undergo a screening process before they can enter the drug court program. Like a regular court case, a judge then sets the conditions the participant must meet to successfully complete the program. "They tell us what to look for," he said. "I think it's a very effective program." The steady increase of drug overdose deaths in recent months has led many families and activists to question the opportunities available to save an addict from the downspiral of addiction. Prescription Addiction Almost half of all people are taking at least one prescription drug, according to statistics released last week by the National Center of Health Statistics. Findings show one in six are taking three or more prescription medications. James said he has noticed the amount of addicts hooked on prescription medication rise in recent years, with an increasing number using opiate-based drugs, including heroin and OxyContin. Results of another report compiled by the Florida Medical Examiners Commission and released last week state that there were about 92,000 drug-related deaths throughout Florida from January to June 2004. Of that number, 3,510 people died with at least one drug in their bodies. There were a total of 170,000 drug-related deaths in the state last year, the commission reported. But to the addict, death isn't a concern, according to Platt. "Death didn't scare me when I was out there," she said. "It's like tunnel vision. If you want to get drugs, you'll get them." Shelling out between $300 to $500 a day to sustain her addiction, Platt looks back at her destructive habit and is thankful she had the willingness to overcome it. "Something hit me when I was sitting in that jail - a spiritual enlightenment. Something made me shut up and listen," she said. "At this point I had the willingness; I was tired of running from myself." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin