Pubdate: Wed, 03 Jan 2007 Source: Mississippi Press, The (MS) Copyright: 2007 Mississippi Press Contact: http://www.gulflive.com/mississippipress/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2254 Author: Natalie Chambers Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) TEENS TO PROSECUTE, DEFEND AND JUDGE IN YOUTH DRUG COURT Pascagoula - Young offenders will be be prosecuted, defended and judged by their peers in a new drug court in Jackson County. Jim Yancey, executive director of the Jackson County Community Coalition, said the project had been on the drawing board three years. A recent $37,366 grant from the Mississippi Department of Public Safety's Office of Justice Program will allow the project to become reality. The Jackson County Youth Court is a program partner. "What happens is the judge oversees the process . The kids will have their cases heard by the judge and other teens," said Yancey. Young non-offenders and offenders alike will be trained by attorneys to fill the roles of lawyers, prosecutors, defenders and judges on actual cases. The peers may recommend incarceration or community service in cases where convictions for drug or alcohol usage are handed down. "The kids will have their cases heard by the judge and other teens. What we have found is this is done in a number of places in the country and we find teenagers tend to be tougher on their peers," said Yancey. The program is expected to kick off in February. "By early spring, we hope to have teenagers trained so they can participate in drug court. The youth court judge will oversee the process," he said. The Jackson County Board of Supervisors approved the project Tuesday. County administrator Alan Sudduth said the project will be on youth court property that the county owns but the program will not cost the county anything. The program is an excellent venue for students interested in careers in law, said Yancey. Project director is Kim Styron. "This is a pilot program. If it works, we hope to institute it in other counties," said Yancey. Prior to Hurricane Katrina 80 percent of youths in Jackson County did not use drugs, he said. Post Katrina, that data changed. The storm's residual affects has affected youths as it has adults. Yancey said youths who've lost a home, do not have a good, positive relationship with an adult or parents, or are not doing well in school, are facing risk factors. He said it does not mean they will drink, but those circumstances increase the risks. Positive influences are considered protective factors. "The more protective factors as teens increases their chances of making into adult life more successfully," said Yancey. Contrary to popular belief, alcohol addiction does not begin in adult life, Yancey explained. "Most adults did not become alcoholics overnight. They started as teenagers. Most people don't realize that. The habit started as a teen and became a coping skill as an adult," said Yancey. "If you are 15 years old and you start drinking at 15, there is a 40 percent chance you will become an alcoholic. If you can get teenagers to not use drugs by the time they reach 18, the odds of them ever becoming addicted to any kind of drugs goes down," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek