Pubdate: Wed, 03 Feb 1999 Source: Philadelphia Inquirer (PA) Copyright: 1999 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.phillynews.com/ Forum: http://interactive.phillynews.com/talk-show/ Author: Angela Couloumbis PRISON DRUG PROGRAM DRAWS SUIT An Inmate In Bridgeton Says The Inpatient Program Offended His Religious Sensibilities CAMDEN -- An inmate of a New Jersey state prison has sued the Department of Corrections, saying that when he asked to be removed from a drug-treatment program that he asserts is religion-based, he was told he would lose his eligibility for a community-release program. In the lawsuit, Walter Corker, who was convicted in May of drug-use and drug-possession charges, contends that the Department of Corrections placed him in an inpatient drug-abuse program called Nu Way whose staff frequently led group meetings in prayer and invoked God's name. Corker, a prisoner at the South Woods State Prison in Bridgeton, writes that his "religious sensibilities[were]shocked" by the mention of God's name during group sessions, and that he felt the program was "using the Lord's name in vain by connecting 'HIM' to the ilk of addiction." Corker said he wrote numerous letters to the program administrator, the prison administration, and officials at the Department of Corrections, stating his objections, but received either no response or "the runaround." He also said that Nu Way staff first became "angry" and then refused his request for transfer out of the program. Corker said he was told that if he quit Nu Way, he would be punished with a "failure to comply" charge, which carries a maximum penalty of 15 days detention and 90 days of segregation; and that the charge would be forwarded to the state Parole Board and become part of his permanent record. In the suit, filed Monday in U.S. District Court, Corker said he was "scared to sign out because of the adverse effects that signing out would have . . . on his future chances of ever being able to benefit from a community-release program." Julia Campbell, spokeswoman for the Department of Corrections, could not say yesterday whether Nu Way was prayer-based, or what the penalties were for withdrawing from the drug-treatment program. But Campbell did say that Nu Way was part of the state prison system's "therapeutic communities" -- intensive substance-abuse programs that place inmates outside the mainstream prison population. She saidthat 1,267 inmates out of the state's total inmate population of 24,132 participate in such communities. Campbell said that on average, inmates stay in those communities for nine months, but no longer than 12 months. When they complete the program, inmates are placed in a preparole program and eventually released to specially trained parole officers. According to information provided by the Department of Corrections, Nu Way was launched in September as part of an initiative by Gov. Whitman to increase the number of treatment programs for addicted offenders. The $1.3 million program was developed by the state Department of Corrections' Office of Drug Operations, and is funded through the federal government. According to Campbell, housing a prisoner in a therapeutic community costs $81 a day, $8 more than it costs to keep an inmate behind bars. - --- MAP posted-by: derek rea