Pubdate: Wed, 20 Aug 2014 Source: Oregonian, The (Portland, OR) Copyright: 2014 The Oregonian Contact: http://www.oregonlive.com/oregonian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/324 Author: Kelly House MULTNOMAH COUNTY START DRUG COURT GRADUATES 100TH PARTICIPANT James Gardner was desperate to get high when he stole the diamond-and-platinum ring that landed him and his girlfriend in jail. The pair, heroin addicts, were having withdrawals. Stealing and pawning the ring was a quick route to drug money. "With that kind of drug, enough was never enough," said Gardner, 27, of Portland. His girlfriend, 22-year-old Kayla Ballew, said by then, the pair was spending $100 a day on heroin. She knew they would be caught for stealing the ring, "but at the time, it didn't matter." They were arrested. When a judge looked at their record, each got a choice: Prison time, or enrollment in an intensive program designed to rehabilitate addicts who commit medium and high-level thefts, robberies and burglaries in pursuit of their addictions. Gardner and Ballew chose the latter and on Wednesday morning, they appeared before Judge Jean Maurer beaming with pride about their success in the program. Multnomah County's START court (an acronym for Success Through Accountability, Restitution and Treatment) graduated its 100th participant Wednesday. Gardner and Ballew were among the seven graduates who received their diplomas. "All of us in the legal profession put our certificate on the wall so we can be reminded of the amount of work that it took," Maurer told the graduates. "I want you to do the same. The work that has been invested by each of you cannot be overstated." Preliminary studies have shown that offenders who participate in the special program are less likely to re-offend than their counterparts who undergo traditional court supervision. As part of the deal, START participants must repay their victims for the items they stole and attend a rigorous schedule of support group meetings and visits with their parole and probation officers. They also must stop doing drugs. On Wednesday, the latest crop of graduates shared their stories as dozens of friends and family members filled the courtroom benches. Some recalled the shame of stealing from family members to buy drugs. One woman wept as she recounted losing custody of her children. Gardner remembered how, two weeks after volunteering for the program, he tried to back out. He's glad he didn't, he said. Now, Gardner and Ballew are both thriving. They have jobs, a car they bought with their own earnings, and they've been sober for a year. Ballew just got her GED, but she said her biggest accomplishment is regaining her family's trust. Her brother loaned her money to help pay restitution. "That never would have happened when I was using," she said. "It's a big deal to have my family's trust back." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D