Pubdate: Thu, 11 Jun 1998 Source: Associated Press Author: Robert Jablon, Associated Press Writer PROSECUTORS SAY `REHAB PROGRAM' KILLED A MAN WITH FORCE-FED ALCOHOL LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Enrique Bravo's battle with alcohol ended with his death. Prosecutors contend it was an attempted cure that killed him -- and perhaps others. Four members of a storefront alcohol and drug recovery group were jailed on charges of manslaughter, accused of tying up the 32-year-old Bravo and force-feeding him alcohol May 25 in a misguided aversion therapy. The Los Angeles County coroner's office has not determined the cause of death, but it was being investigated as a homicide, coroner's spokesman Scott Carrier said. Police are looking into the deaths of at least seven other men who may have died under similar circumstances in the county over the past two years, the Los Angeles Times reported today. Many victims were apparently forced to drink rubbing alcohol, a source told the newspaper. Prosecutor Craig Renetzky told the Times this week that Bravo was fed ``nothing but alcohol'' and was kept restrained in a room with another man, who survived the same medically unsupervised treatment. ``The idea was that the guy would later hate alcohol so much he wouldn't drink anymore,'' Renetzky said. ``But the guy died.'' Bravo was pronounced dead at the clinic, Grupo Liberacion y Fortaleza (Liberation and Strength Group) in the San Fernando Valley. The four suspects worked as volunteers and some had been through the same program, the prosecutor said. Alberto Saguache, 38; Armando Nestor Sakaqil, 29; Dante Rosillo Barrera, 32, and Jose Robert Rodriguez, 45, pleaded innocent to one count each of involuntary manslaughter and two counts each of false imprisonment. A preliminary hearing was scheduled for today. Those familiar with alcohol treatment programs said what Bravo allegedly went through was neither common nor accepted. ``This is obviously some kind of bizarre notion of how you help people get clean and sober,'' said Bill Gallegos, chairman of the Los Angeles County Alcohol, Tobacco and Drug Policy Coalition. Effectively dealing with alcoholism requires dealing with psychological, emotional and even genetic roots of the problem and requires patients to ``commit their lives to a day-by-day process of staying clean,'' Gallegos said. Experts said some alcohol programs use aversion therapy; some give patients a drug to make them nauseous after ingesting alcohol. However, all are medically supervised and never involve alcohol overdoses. Bravo may have turned to an unlicensed and unsupervised program because of a widespread shortage of treatment facilities, Gallegos said. ``And that's the sad thing,'' he said. On Wednesday, a handful of people milled around outside the shabby, empty storefront of the self-help group. A sign taped to the window said the location was ``temporarily closed due to a death'' and asked anyone with information to contact homicide detectives. Jose Luis Ramirez, a 27-year-old truck driver from North Hollywood, said he and others started the grassroots group in 1994 as a place to talk about their alcoholism -- the kind of group encounters used by Alcoholics Anonymous. As many as 50 people a day would gather to talk and counsel each other. Ramirez said the informal membership chipped in for rent and food, and some people were allowed to live in the place for weeks or even months until they found jobs. Ramirez said he neither saw nor heard of aversion therapy being used, but said some alcoholics were given liquor to stave off withdrawal symptoms. ``We feel bad when we stop to drink, you know?'' he said. ``So we give them a little shot (of) alcohol to stop the shaking ... Nobody died from a little shot of alcohol.'' Ramirez said he didn't believe his friends forced anyone to drink. As for Bravo, ``I think he died because he was drinking for a long time ... before he came here.'' He estimated as many as 3,000 people had been involved with the group. ``We help a lot of people every day,'' he said. ``We do a good job, I think.'' - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett