Pubdate: Tue, 21 Dec 2004 Source: Spartanburg Herald Journal (SC) Copyright: 2004 The Spartanburg Herald-Journal Contact: http://www.goupstate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/977 Author: Lynne Powell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) GOWDY WANTS DRUG MOMS Solicitor Trey Gowdy plans to prosecute mothers whose newborns test positive for drugs unless they have successfully completed a drug treatment program. Gowdy sent a letter on Dec. 2 to area hospitals asking for their reporting procedures on pregnant women and newborns who test positive for a controlled substance. According to Ray Trail, director of the Spartanburg County Department of Social Services office, his agency has a drug review board that meets monthly to look at such cases. In most cases, Trail said, the mother is placed in a treatment program. But there are no criminal consequences if the woman fails DSS-ordered drug tests or doesn't complete the program, although DSS agents decide whether the mother retains custody of her child. "My concern is that treatment doesn't work all of the time," Gowdy said. "In fact, it doesn't even work most of the time, and there should be consequences when these mothers continue to use drugs." Angela Kennedy of Spartanburg was sentenced to five years in prison earlier this year after she tested positive for cocaine during three pregnancies in five years. Her third pregnancy ended after her baby was stillborn in December 1998. Last week, a judge sentenced Pamela Cruz-Reyes to four years in prison after she and her newborn tested positive for cocaine. Cruz-Reyes had tested positive for drugs four times throughout her pregnancy and refused treatment. "I have two ladies sitting in jail right now for ignoring treatment, the same thing others have done and are getting away with," Gowdy said. The solicitor said he wants mothers who have a drug problem to be placed in a treatment program and given random drug tests. Under his plan, if the woman fails a drug test or doesn't complete the program, she would be prosecuted in drug court and her sentence would be aggressive treatment. If the woman doesn't complete the more intensive drug treatment program, she would receive a jail sentence. "In essence, the mother will get two bites at the treatment apple and then she'll face further consequences," he said. "As it stands now, I'm not being made aware (of these cases)," Gowdy said, reiterating that a mother who seeks treatment and completes a program won't be criminally prosecuted. Gowdy said he'd also ask that a prosecutor from his staff join the DSS review board. Art Stephenson, director of the Cherokee County DSS office, said that to his knowledge, agents notify law enforcement each time they report to the hospital where a newborn has tested positive for drugs. But Cruz-Reyes' is the only case in at least four years where DSS notified law enforcement of a positive drug test, even though Cruz-Reyes' 2-year-old tested positive for cocaine when she was born. Stephenson said he was unaware of that instance. "The number one goal should be for a healthy expectant mother to deliver a healthy child," Gowdy said. "If a woman chooses not to get treatment for her drug problem, I'm not going to ignore that." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin