Pubdate: Sat, 1 Dec 2007 Source: Log Cabin Democrat (AR) Copyright: 2007 The Log Cabin Democrat Contact: http://thecabin.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/548 Author: Joe Lamb, Log Cabin Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Drug court celebrates four years of success The 20th Judicial District Drug Court celebrated its fourth year of providing drug offenders with an alternative to prison or regular probation Friday morning. It was standing room only in Courtroom A at the Faulkner County Courthouse, with over 100 people gathered to hear the testimonies of graduates or current participants in the drug court program. The first to speak was Jason Pruitt, who said a 10-year addiction to methamphetamine derailed his career before leading to his arrest in Greenbrier. "I was raised to know right from wrong in a good Christian home," Pruitt said to the packed courtroom, "I don't know where I got off track." The drug court's four-phase regimen of counseling, support group meetings and random drug testing helped Pruitt get back on track, he said. But like many in the program, Pruitt wasn't a model of adherence to the requirements. Violations earned him a 365-day stay in prison. "That's what helps," Pruitt said of his year's imprisonment, which he described as a time of reflection. When his time was served, he was brought back into the program, and graduated successfully. Mark Young, another drug court participant, said he hopes to graduate from the program in a year. For a time, he said, he was "a poster child of what not to do" in the drug court. Like Pruitt, his violations of the court's regulations resulted in a year in prison. Young said he was angry about being locked up, but over time realized that his marijuana and alcohol abuse had been a prison of their own, estranging him from his loved ones. "I'd locked myself up from my family for years," he said. Young said his drug problems started in his first years of college, when he found himself "away from my parents and people who knew my parents. ... Always us drug addicts think that maybe we would have quit before we got in trouble, but that never happens." Through the drug court program, he said, "I gained a sense of responsibility for my own actions, which I never had." Patty Clements said she knew methamphetamine "was going to be the death of me," before she was arrested in Vilonia. "I got a second crack at life through drug court," she said, "and I'm going to embrace it." After graduating from the program, Clements regained custody of her daughter. Circuit Judge Charles "Ed" Clawson said he struggled with Jay Pierce, another drug court participant who gave his testimony Friday. "You know the old adage 'You can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink?,'" Clawson said. "Well, it's my experience that if you tie him there long enough, he'll get thirsty." Pierce said the first year of the program was "pretty bad," as he rebelled against the drug court staff. Eventually, though, he said he realized that the drug court staff weren't people trying to get him in trouble, but rather "people going up to bat for me." "It's really cool to see guys on the side of the law helping me," he said. "It's like they took a program and tried to say, 'Look, there's a lot of drug addicts out there. Instead of sticking them in prison and doing away with them, let's try to help them out.'" Another drug court participant, Skylar Carter expressed his appreciation to the drug court staff by teaming with Young to write and record a hip-hop song dealing with the experience of the program's participants. Carter also presented Clawson with a plaque on behalf of all the participants. Carter said his drug of choice was cocaine, and his addiction led him to rob convenience stores, motels and dope dealers. "I got stopped on some road," he said. "I was putting up a fight and I got maced, slammed, every other thing. It wasn't until I heard a dog barking and they said they'd turn him loose if I didn't quit resisting that I calmed myself down. "And they say you can't make good decisions on drugs?," he joked. Even the birth of his son last year didn't shake his addiction, he said. "Like every other addict, I said when my son was born that I'd quit," he said. "I didn't." Carter is still hoping to graduate from the program. He had a major setback about a year and a half ago, just seven days before he would have graduated. An old friend came to town, he said, and persuaded him to do cocaine. The consequence: A year in prison. Carter was released on July 12, he said, "and here I am, trying to get it together again." Conway Police Chief A. J. Gary and local attorney Frank Shaw commented on the success of the program after the ceremony. "This program helps people," Shaw said. "It reduces crime and it's cheaper than incarceration. It just works; it's the best program we have." Gary pointed out that once a person has graduated, their record is sealed and the offense that brought them into the program can't be held against them when applying for a job. "They can truthfully say that they've never been convicted of a felony," he said. To date, none of the program's 58 graduates have been charged with a new felony and 96 percent have maintained gainful employment. The program has a 82-percent graduation rate. All participants who spoke said without the program they'd likely be dead or in prison today. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake