Pubdate: Sat, 01 Dec 2007 Source: Courier News (Elgin, IL) Copyright: 2007 The Courier News Contact: http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/couriernews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1200 Author: Janelle Walker Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) STUDENTS GET EYE-OPENER IN KANE DRUG COURT ST. CHARLES TOWNSHIP -- In Sue Sullivan's health class, she teaches students about the harmful effects of alcohol, tobacco and illicit drugs. But instead of just telling the children how drugs can ruin a life, Sullivan took that lesson a step further Friday, taking half of the Central Middle School seventh-graders to the Kane County Drug Court. The students were able not only to hear as dozens of drug offenders appeared before the judge, but also to see how drugs hurt individual lives. The second half of the class will visit later this month. "I thought, 'Why would they do that? They keep coming back again and again. That isn't how I'd want to spend some of my days,'a=80%" said 12-year-old Rachel Rodewald, one of the 67 pupils who sat through about an hour of drug court cases Friday morning. "Seeing people come out of the jail -- I just really never want to be like that." That's exactly the lesson 16th Judicial Circuit Court Judge Bill Weir hoped the children would hear. He, as well as prosecutors and defense attorneys, gave the students a short tutorial on what happens at drug court before moving on to the morning docket. "What this court attempts, through treatment and intensive probation, is to break the addiction," Weir said, adding that most of those in his courtroom were arrested on cocaine or marijuana possession charges. Team approach in court Defense and prosecuting attorneys said they work as a team to help those with drug problems stay clean and sober. "My role in the court is to help people get through the court system," said Public Defender Melynda Benjamin. "The defense attorney does not get you out of trouble. We are not here to make it go away but to help you be treated fairly. There are consequences when you do something against the law." There were 129 drug court defendants on the docket Friday -- one of the two days each week Weir hears drug court cases. Some defendants were in the Kane County Jail and were brought in in handcuffs. Others were charged recently with drug possession. Still others had new drug charges against them while going through the drug court process. Weir had to be hard on a few people. One young woman hadn't brought the paperwork with her to prove she'd been showing up for her drug testing. The next time she forgets her paperwork, Weir said, she may have to spend time in jail. Another man had missed one of his court appearances recently. "Do you have a refrigerator? Put your court date on your refrigerator door," Weir told the man. Or, he suggested, the man could write the date in soap on his car windshield. "We miss you when you are not here," Weir said. "Your next court date is Dec. 20. That's five days before Christmas -- five shopping days before Christmas." If the man doesn't make that next court date, a warrant will be issued for his arrest, Weir said. The students sat quietly through the morning call. But back out in the hallway at the Kane County Judicial Center, they began talking about what they'd seen and heard in the courtroom. "I was surprised that there were a lot of young people, and a lot of different ages. People came out in handcuffs," said 12-year-old Ryan Minehart. "Your parents would find out, and you'd get in a lot of trouble." In her classroom next week, Sullivan said, she'll have each student take on the "role" of a drug court defendant and talk about how it would feel to get in trouble with drugs, to be in front of a judge, and how each would feel about the sentence handed down. "We want them to not want to ever be there again," Sullivan said. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath