Pubdate: Wed, 19 May 2004
Source: Towson Times (MD)
Copyright: Towson Times 2004
Contact:  http://www.towsontimes.com
Address: 409 Washington Avenue, Towson, MD 21204
Fax: 410-337-2490
Author: Mary T. Robbins
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts)

DRUG COURT GRADUATE EMERGES TO NEW LIFE

 From Addiction to Hope in Inuagural Class

"In the beginning, life was fun and dangerous, with a sense of excitement. 
I was spiraling down into a world of nothing worthwhile, although I could 
not see it in myself then. "

- - from "The Turning Point of My Learning," 17-year-old juvenile drug court 
graduate Justin Padgett's final essay submitted to the court.

In ninth grade, the roller coaster began. Justin Padgett started smoking 
marijuana with a cousin and her boyfriend.

He was 14.

He'd light up, then quit for two months, then start again.

"I was a madman," Padgett acknowledged.

Barbara Connolly watched the youngest of her three sons - once so loving, 
so respectful - grow to steal from her, threaten her with knives and punch 
holes in doors in their Old Hillendale apartment.

The former honor roll student dropped out of Towson High School.

"That's what really tore me down, knowing how great a kid he was before the 
drugs," Connolly said. "I didn't know what to do about it. I didn't want to 
give up, but I was so tired of fighting for him to get up and care about 
himself and be productive."

Last week, he proved to himself and others that the "madman" was no longer 
occupying his 5-foot-8-inch frame.

On May 15, Padgett, along with two other boys who did not wish to be 
identified, became the first graduate's of the county's Juvenile Drug 
Court, a pilot program that began in March 2003 in an effort to keep 
juveniles with minor drug charges from entering the criminal justice system.

The program, which currently has 21 county juveniles enrolled, is funded 
through a variety of federal and state grants.

Each graduate must complete a minimum of one year of intensive outpatient 
substance-abuse treatment and stay sober for at least six consecutive months.

Offenders in the program are constantly monitored by the Circuit Court and 
the Department of Juvenile Services.

Upon successful completion of the program, the drug charges against the 
offender are dropped.

A turning point

When Padgett was charged with possession of marijuana, his probation 
officer laid out the options for him: Either volunteer to participate in a 
pilot Juvenile Drug Court program or go to a juvenile detention facility 
for six to nine months.

For Padgett, the answer was easy. He would give the Juvenile Drug Court a try.

"I was glad because I didn't want to see him go to Cheltenham," Connolly 
said of the youth facility in Prince George's County.

Still, despite his intentions, Padgett struggled. There were old habits and 
old friendships to be broken.

"I still didn't want to do what was asked of me," he said. "I was still 
smoking pot and getting high, knowing I was going to get drug tested."

He'd smoke dope and then chug "detox" drinks found in health and vitamin 
stores or massive amounts of water, to clean out his system.

"In the very beginning of the program, I was scheming all the time," he 
recalled.

A relapse and a "dirty urine" _ lingo for positive signs of substance use 
in a drug test _ earned him a court-ordered, 35-day stay at the Maryland 
Youth Resource Center.

There, he was told what time to eat and to sleep and which shoes to wear.

"It stripped me of all my freedom," Padgett said.

It was his wake-up call.

"At that point, I was willing to try anything" to stay away from drugs, he 
said. "I knew if I was going to keep doing the stupid things I was doing 
I'd end up at Boys Village or (Charles) Hickey (School)."

Positive reinforcement

Connolly, 53, used up her vacation time from her job as an account clerk in 
the fire department to sit at her son's side at the hearings, held every 
other Wednesday in Baltimore County Circuit Court.

At the hearings, presided over by Circuit Court Judge Kathleen Cox, 
juveniles receive a review of their progress.

Padgett looked forward to plucking out Nerds or Skittles from a basket full 
of candy, used as a small reward for two more weeks of being clean and 
sober. Each time Cox offered a bit of praise following a youth's good 
report, the courtroom would erupt in applause.

Sometimes, the reward would be a $10 gift certificate for Best Buy.

"It was little and petty, but to the kids it meant a lot to have that 
recognition," Connolly said. "It gave them a sense of accomplishment."

Added Padgett, "It's so much better going to court knowing you're going to 
get the clap (applause) rather than knowing you had a dirty urine."

Padgett started taking pride in his appearance and reconnected with a 
childhood friend, someone he could count on outside of the bad crowd with 
whom he had associated.

But after earning his GED, Padgett faced another problem: too much idle 
time on his hands. Hoping to spark some productivity, Cox ordered the teen 
to find a job.

He was hired at Marshall's, where he has since earned the Associate of the 
Quarter award.

With a new job under his belt and the support of his former kindergarten 
classmate, his outlook began to change.

"That's what got me through it," Padgett said of his job and friend's 
support. "I don't feel the need to go back to using."

He began to see that he didn't want to throw his life away.

Around Christmas, Padgett joined the other drug court teens in adopting a 
needy family for the holidays and purchased items on their wish list, 
something else that gave him a shot of self-pride.

"He's not perfect," Connolly said. "There are still issues that need to be 
addressed, but the ones about self-esteem, self-support and responsibility, 
he's pretty much on a clear path about."

Now, he looks forward to his job and one day moving out on his own.

He's also on a mission to lose weight. From 247 pounds, the teen is down to 
218.

On Mother's Day, he set the table and ordered his mother's favorite Chinese 
food as a surprise while she was at church.

"I'll just have an easier life, that will be gift enough for me," Connolly 
said. "I just felt like he was never going to wake up and turn his life 
around."

After a year in the Juvenile Drug Court, that's exactly what happened, his 
supporters say.

"The difference in you is just incredible," Cox told Padgett at the 
graduation ceremony.

Gov. Robert Ehrlich was on hand to congratulate the boys.

"I do not pretend to know where you are," the governor told the graduates. 
"I do not pretend to know some of the pressures you feel. I do not pretend 
to know what it's like to have an addiction. I'm not going to pretend I 
understand how you feel.

"But I am proud of the new start in your life."

Dressed in a navy blue suit and tie, Padgett was proud, too. Beaming a wide 
smile, he received a standing ovation, a watch and a county 
executive-issued proclamation for his efforts in battling a marijuana 
addiction.

"If they didn't put me in drug court, I'd probably still be smoking," he 
said. "There's a lot of positive things that came out of it."
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