Pubdate: Thu, 09 Mar 2006 Source: Argus Leader (SD) Copyright: 2006 Argus Leader Contact: http://www.argusleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/842 Author: Nestor Ramos Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) NUMBER OF WOMEN IN PRISON GROWING There were 389 women in South Dakota's state prison system Wednesday, an all-time high that forced 43 minimum security prisoners into the former Department of Criminal Investigations dormitories in Pierre. And the number is growing. The state Department of Corrections estimates that the average daily number of female prisoners will grow by 20 percent this year. The trend's cause is obvious to many, both in and out of law enforcement: methamphetamine. "We punish meth," South Dakota Attorney General Larry Long said Wednesday. Long wasn't aware of the new corrections statistics, but said he was not surprised by them. "If you use it or distribute it, we don't have a sense of humor about that." According to the DOC, 40 percent of the women entering prison in South Dakota in 2005 were addicted to amphetamines. That number was 20 percent in 2002. Long said that whereas most other addictions - from alcohol to marijuana to heroin - affect men at a far greater rate than women, women make up more than half of all meth addicts. That, he said, is why the rapid increase in the number of female inmates comes as no surprise. It's not known why meth affects women at a rate so much higher than other drugs, but many have speculated that the weight loss often associated with the drug is a primary factor. Then, the addiction takes hold. South Dakota has some of the most punitive meth laws in the region, according to a 2004 report by Rice University in Houston, Bowdoin College in Maine and the Native American Women's Health Education Resource Center on the Yankton Sioux Reservation. While other states have less severe penalties for meth possession and classify meth ingestion as a separate, lesser offense, first-time offenders in South Dakota can be sentenced for up to 10 years in prison. Charon Asetoyer, the Yankton center's executive director and one of the study's authors, said the state law that punishes meth ingestion as a fourth-degree felony is "terrible." "You don't go out and put severe sanctions on users. They are the victims. You put severe sanctions on manufacturing and distribution," she said. The prison statistics are a symptom of South Dakota's punitive approach toward meth addiction, she said, when a rehabilitative approach would be more successful. "It's a judgment call made by the Legislature, but I think that call is the right one," Long said of the comparatively harsh penalties for meth users. Meth addiction is unusually strong, he said, and typical treatment programs, which run from a month to six weeks, are ineffective. Rehabilitation from meth addiction can take a year. Long said that the nature of the addiction means people will not agree to rehab unless they are already locked up. "The only effective way to get treatment is to rattle the jailhouse door in front of them," Long said. "Sometimes the most humane thing we can do is lock these people up." Asetoyer does not agree. South Dakota needs to develop a long-term, meth-specific treatment program, she said, despite the cost. South Dakota needs "a whole different approach," she said. The Minnehaha County Jail houses about 65 female inmates, which is average for recent years, Warden Tim Devlin said. The number of women has steadily increased in recent years, though. "It kind of spikes up and down," he said. Officials attribute rate to meth use {SIDEBAR} The Growth Rate Of Women Inmates In State Prison Fiscal Year % Growth 1995-96 24 1996-97 10 1997-98 15 1998-99 17 1999-2000 3 2000-01 8 2001-02 7 2002-03 12 2003-04 15 2004-05 6 2005-06 *20 *estimated S.D. Department of Corrections - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman