Pubdate: Sun, 16 Dec 2007 Source: Peoria Journal Star (IL) Copyright: 2007sPeoria Journal Star Contact: http://pjstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/338 Author: Pam Adams Note: Does not publish letters from outside our circulation area. COURTING A LIFE WITHOUT DRUGS Graduates Of Peoria County Drug Court Lean On Each Other Through Alumni Group In the years since they graduated from Peoria County Drug Court, they've stepped into ordinary, everyday lives. Richard Pickens, disabled with a host of health problems himself, dedicates much of his time caring for a wife with back problems and a mother with dementia. "I don't clean up, he won't let me go in the kitchen," says his wife, Glenda. "He wants to do my laundry, too, but I prefer to do my own." Pickens, 53, didn't enter drug court thinking it would change his life and restore his marriage. "I was just trying to get out of jail." Kim Robinson, 39, however, was desperate to find something tougher than the myriad drug treatment programs she'd already gone through when she sought drug court. Today, she works two jobs and takes community college classes part time. She just moved into a little white house she adores. "It's so comfortable," she says. Johnnie Higgins just started a new job delivering meals for a local agency. It's full time, with benefits, he practically brags. It's also his third job in four years. At age 52, it's his third job ever. Simple, seemingly uninspired routines - getting a driver's license or a job, settling into a comfortable new house, salvaging an 18-year marriage - underline the achievements behind the graduation certificates they earned the day they walked out of the courtroom. "It's the best education I've ever had," Higgins says. Once known mainly as "Johnnie Wine," Higgins was more accustomed to a judge as villain than the judge as guidance counselor, more fixed on going to prison from a courtroom than graduating from one. "I spent 24 years in and out of jail or prison, 35 years using drugs," he says matter-of-factly. He hasn't been back in the courthouse on a criminal charge since he graduated in 2005, hasn't used drugs or alcohol since 2003. In fact, he's the current president of the drug court alumni group, Unity + Serenity, a network of drug court graduates who support one another and the program. "Our group is just like any alumni group at a prestigious university," he says, "be it Harvard, Stanford, Yale, whatever." "They are an important part of drug court," says 10th Judicial Circuit Judge John Barra. Now in Tazewell County, Barra, as chief judge, was presiding over drug court when Higgins graduated. It sounds odd to use terms like "educate," "graduate" and "alumni" in the same breath as drugs, crime and court. But drug court is not a typical court. The court's approach to addicts charged with nonviolent felonies is not quite like criminal court, not quite like drug treatment programs, not quite like other alternatives to jail, such as probation, and nothing like prison. Instead, drug courts synthesize all three, under a judge's weekly supervision, into a highly structured system unique to both criminal justice and drug treatment. Pickens, 53, calls drug court a "short, transparent leash." The drug court team - including prosecutor, public defender, probation officer, drug-treatment provider and judge - holds power over where clients live, where they work and who they see. Minor infractions result in almost immediate consequences. Higgins once spent a weekend in jail for letting a known drug user style his hair. Minor successes garner immediate praise from the judge, as well as gradual loosening of the leash. More than a diploma, graduating from drug court means a sentence or charges will be dismissed. Drop out or get kicked out, and the case is returned to criminal court. "Our goal is to make people become responsible citizens," Barra says. Chris Hollins, an early drug court graduate who helped start the alumni group, sums up drug court's impact. Once a "bona fide thief" supporting a crack cocaine addiction, she says, "I went in and out of the penitentiary more times than I care to count. I only went through drug court once." A substance abuse counselor for White Oaks, she's currently part of the drug court team. She hasn't used drugs in nine years. Seeking more success For 10 years, Peoria County's drug court has resisted conventional thinking about incarcerating drug addicts like Hollins or Higgins. The program's challenge now is to mirror successes of drug courts nationally, by increasing participation and decreasing drop-out rates. According to February 2007 figures, 335 people had gone through drug court since it began. Only 32 percent graduated, a figure well below the national average of 47 percent. The local program does not have figures on numbers who may have relapsed after graduation, though drug court graduates know, more intimately than most, how often that happens. "One thing about drug court clients, we have a bond," Pickens says. "To see them turn the other way and go back out there, it's painful." But drug court alumni don't say that, somehow, drug court failed. Instead, suggests Becky Bridges, a 2002, graduate, the alumni group plays a crucial role preventing relapses. "To me, the people who stay clean and sober tend to be part of the alumni group in some form or fashion." Drug courts became a national phenomenon soon after Miami started the first one in 1989. The potential of breaking cycles of addiction-related crime held possible, welcome side benefits of reducing the numbers of repeat drug offenders clogging courts, jails and prisons. In less than two decades, the number of drug courts grew to about 2,000, including 27 in Illinois. In Peoria County, low participation and graduation rates have had limited impact on an overburdened criminal justice system. The county's drug court team offers a variety of reasons for both. Public defenders in criminal court either don't know or know enough about it to suggest it as an option for clients. Skeptics say the concept is too easy and mock it with nicknames like "hug-a-thug." Eligible offenders often turn down the opportunity, saying it's too hard, too long and - with weekly drug tests, weekly visits with the judge, along with other requirements - too strict. They don't want to plead guilty, a prerequisite for drug court. They'd rather take their chances in criminal court, says drug court team leader Linda Earley of White Oaks Cos. They think they can beat the charges or get regular probation. Prospective drug court clients usually are in jail when Earley talks to them. "I'll have people say, 'I can do prison standing on my head, and you're telling me you want me to do 18 to 24 months in a program where they're eyeballing me every minute.' " But Allen Buckley, a 2005 graduate, says he heard about drug court in jail, then convinced a judge that's what he wanted. "Drug court is nothing you really hear about, my lawyer had told me it wasn't an option," he says. "You don't get the information from people in authority because all they want is a conviction." The state's attorney's office is the gatekeeper for drug court. Prosecutors have veto power over who gets in, even if they meet eligibility guidelines. "I think sometimes prosecutors think it's too easy, like a person's getting away with something," says John Lonergan, public defender in drug court since it began. Finally, Lonergan says, Peoria's low numbers could be because Peoria's drug court is more demanding than others. Though drug court is not a cure-all, supporters argue it's successful on broad levels, especially in comparison to probation, prison or treatment alone. "What's the value of a life saved to society?" asks current Drug Court Judge Rick Grawey. "Certainly, to that person, it's huge." Persuading skeptics Judge Barra, once a skeptic himself, says it will take more time for drug court's true impact to show. "But having been involved 5 1/2 years, I think it does work, it will work. How effective will it be? I don't know." Peoria County State's Attorney Kevin Lyons is less skeptical about drug court now than he was when it began. For the return on the cost and effort, drug court is not a good buy, he says. But it's difficult for him to look at it in strictly cost-efficient terms. He's seen how the drug-court experience changes people, clients and judges included. "I don't know how to increase the success rate," he says. "But of successes, it's the most satisfying completion I deal with. I don't see anybody coming out of the penitentiary or off probation saying, 'Yeah, that was a good deal.' " David Loveland, research director for Fayette Cos., parent company of White Oaks, says the local program can be more efficient and effective by wrapping more services around drug court clients sooner. The program recently received a $175,000 federal grant aimed at increasing graduation rates by 50 percent and reducing the length of time to complete the program from an average of 24 months to 17 months. Among other features, the money, combined with matching county and state funds, allows staff to enhance treatment aspects of the program, start job-education and trauma support groups, improve program evaluation methods, and hire two part-time recovery coaches to help clients access community resources. The alumni group is drug court's home-grown community resource. Though the program gets referrals from prosecutors and defense attorneys, alumni are the best recruiting tools, Earley says. Higgins, for example, carries drug court brochures with him at all times, in case he meets prospective drug-court clients or attorneys who may know of prospective drug court clients. "People see the Richards and the Johnnies on the street," Earley says. "When they're in trouble or really low, that's who they're calling." The group also creates a new set of clean-and-sober peers for themselves and drug court clients. They offer support, sponsor activities and volunteer transportation to 12-step meetings. Like any alumni group, they raise money. Members originally thought the money raised would go for parties and outings for drug court clients. Instead, it's typically used for basics like prescription drugs, dental care, or to buy clothes for drug court clients released from jail. "Giving back is not just important for the alumni," says Higgins, "it's an important part of recovery." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek