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News (Media Awareness Project) - US IL: The Straight and Narrow
Title:US IL: The Straight and Narrow
Published On:2009-02-06
Source:Bolingbrook Sun, The (IL)
Fetched On:2009-02-07 08:12:17
THE STRAIGHT AND NARROW

Local Drug Court Helps Turn Lives Around

Will County State's Attorney James Glasgow announced that the Will County
Drug Court has helped another 13 people break their addictions and avoid
criminal charges stemming from their drug abuse.

The 13 former abusers graduated from the drug court last week. Since 2000,
217 people have graduated from drug court and have reclaimed their lives.
The program boasts a 90-percent success rate, which means that fewer than
10 percent of its graduates commit new offenses.

Glasgow spearheaded the creation of the court in the late 1990s. Drug
court helps abusers who committed non-violent criminal offenses to kick
their addictions and return to their community as productive, tax-paying
citizens.

"Our drug court is a success on multiple fronts," Glasgow said. "We're
working with people whose lives were driven and devastated by their drug
addictions, and we're helping them become productive members of their
community rather than a drain on society. And for each dollar we spend on
a prevention program like drug court, we can save 10 times the money in
remedial costs."

Saving money

Circuit Judge Carla Alessio Policandriotes, who presides over drug court,
said that by 2011 the program will have saved taxpayers a projected $14.3
million in remedial costs that include jailing defendants rather than
providing treatment for their addictions. Those savings are based upon the
projected number of people who will have gone through the program. It
costs only $3,000 to put an individual through drug court.

"Defendants who enter this program don't receive free 'Get Out of Jail'
cards," Policandriotes said. "Drug court requires strong commitments by
participants who are willing to work to kick their addictions and turn
their lives around. But when they graduate, they have the necessary tools
to stay clean and achieve their goals in life."

In drug court, prosecutors and defense attorneys work with the judge and
treatment providers to help abusers kick their addictions. The program is
a cost-effective alternative to dumping nonviolent drug offenders into
state prisons, where they cycle in and out of the system.

Defendants allowed into the program are carefully screened. They must
remain drug free, submit to random drug tests, find employment, follow
through with treatment and attend weekly drug court sessions if they are
to graduate.

For more information on Will County Drug Court, go to the state's
attorney's Web site at www.willcountysao.com and click on Crime
Prevention.
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