News (Media Awareness Project) - US IL: Ex-Addict Hates Being Anti-Drug Poster Child |
Title: | US IL: Ex-Addict Hates Being Anti-Drug Poster Child |
Published On: | 2003-03-05 |
Source: | Chicago Tribune (IL) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-20 23:01:27 |
EX-ADDICT HATES BEING ANTI-DRUG POSTER CHILD
Officials Use Mug Shots To Shock Teens
PEKIN, Ill. -- Penny Wood agreed last month to let authorities publish
photographs of her that graphically depict the ravages of methamphetamine
use, thinking that this unusual provision of a plea bargain agreement to
escape a long prison sentence might deter others from using the homemade drug.
Now, though, local distribution of the photos has become something of a
modern-day scarlet letter for Wood, who says she can scarcely walk down the
streets of this central Illinois river town without people pointing and
whispering. She is the butt of jokes on local radio, and one of her
grandsons said he worries that the "after" picture in which "Grandma looks
purple" will show up in his elementary school.
But Downstate prosecutors say they plan to keep circulating the pictures,
which have become the centerpiece of a public campaign against
methamphetamine use. They believe the pictures are convincing local
teenagers with a surprisingly effective argument that meth might make them
ugly.
Prosecutors' refusal to back down in the face of Wood's complaints and
threats of a lawsuit illustrates just how concerned authorities are
becoming about meth, as the powerfully addictive drug gains popularity
across the state. Methamphetamine which belongs to the same class of drugs
as cocaine, is a particular problem in rural areas, where many of its
ingredients can be found in farm fertilizers, but it's reportedly growing
in use in Chicago and the suburbs.
State officials share the concern. At the urging of Atty. Gen. Lisa
Madigan, the Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously advanced a measure
Tuesday that would sharply increase penalties for meth manufacturers who
endanger children--doubling the maximum sentence to 120 years.
But in Pekin, just south of Peoria, law-enforcement officials have a
campaign going they think is proving effective at the local level.
The idea was born recently when Tazewell County State's Atty. Stewart
Umholtz sorted through before and after pictures of Wood, a meth addict who
has been charged several times with drug offenses.
In the first picture, a police booking photo from a drug arrest in 1998,
Wood was a full-faced, youthful-looking woman. In the second, a 2002
booking photo, Wood is a gaunt and sickly 40-year-old with dry, cracked
facial skin and poor color.
"When I first saw the two, it was apparent the photographs themselves
described the dangers of methamphetamine use better than any words I can
ever use," Umholtz said.
Not long after, Umholtz's office offered a plea bargain that would free
Wood on probation if she would consent to the public use of her photos.
"The state is allowed to use booking photos for drug education purposes,"
the agreement said. "No identifying information shall be used."
Wood signed the document, and as a result prosecutors agreed to lower her
sentence to the 32 days she had already served in the county jail and 4
years of probation. Wood, who had been convicted of drug possession once
before, could have received 30 years of prison time if she had been
convicted of unlawful criminal drug conspiracy.
Her understanding of the agreement, she now says, is that her photographs
would be used in a low-key awareness program, maybe at local drug treatment
and prevention programs. She says she also believed that because Umholtz's
office agreed not to supply her name along with the photographs, no one
would find out who she was.
"It was to be used for drug education purposes only, to keep kids off
drugs," Wood said. "Because that picture would. If that picture doesn't
shock a child, I don't know what will."
Local officials thought so too. Before long, the photos were posted at the
local Boys & Girls Club, the probation office and on the Web site of
Umholtz's office. High school officials also plan to post the pictures, and
police in neighboring jurisdictions have asked for copies.
In accordance with his agreement, Umholtz never released Wood's name in
conjunction with her photos on educational materials. But in Pekin, a city
of 33,000, that hasn't made much difference. Newspapers have run her name
with the photos, and everybody knows who Wood is by now anyway.
The photos they have seen around town have persuaded at least some
teenagers to stay off meth.
"It's disgusting," said Jon Behrends, 18, referring to Wood's photos.
"It made me see what it does to you and the effects that it has on your
body," said Chris Lang, 18.
That reaction is exactly what Umholtz said he had in mind. His intent was
not to punish Wood, he said, but to scare kids away from the drug.
"I have kids who are rapidly approaching their teen years," Umholtz said.
"And every parent's worst nightmare is to have a kid addicted to this drug."
But a mile and a half away from the Tazewell County Courthouse, Wood
hunkers down in her cluttered apartment, chain-smoking Marlboros and
cursing the day she signed the agreement. She said she is in an outpatient
rehabilitation program and that she is clean and sober today.
Her main objection is the public humiliation the dissemination of the
photos has caused her and, she says, her four children and 10 grandchildren
scattered mostly around Tazewell County.
"I have no problem trying to help keep people off drugs because it is
really my life completely," Wood said. "But they went about it wrong. I've
paid for my mistakes. I don't want my grandchildren to keep paying for my
mistakes."
Officials Use Mug Shots To Shock Teens
PEKIN, Ill. -- Penny Wood agreed last month to let authorities publish
photographs of her that graphically depict the ravages of methamphetamine
use, thinking that this unusual provision of a plea bargain agreement to
escape a long prison sentence might deter others from using the homemade drug.
Now, though, local distribution of the photos has become something of a
modern-day scarlet letter for Wood, who says she can scarcely walk down the
streets of this central Illinois river town without people pointing and
whispering. She is the butt of jokes on local radio, and one of her
grandsons said he worries that the "after" picture in which "Grandma looks
purple" will show up in his elementary school.
But Downstate prosecutors say they plan to keep circulating the pictures,
which have become the centerpiece of a public campaign against
methamphetamine use. They believe the pictures are convincing local
teenagers with a surprisingly effective argument that meth might make them
ugly.
Prosecutors' refusal to back down in the face of Wood's complaints and
threats of a lawsuit illustrates just how concerned authorities are
becoming about meth, as the powerfully addictive drug gains popularity
across the state. Methamphetamine which belongs to the same class of drugs
as cocaine, is a particular problem in rural areas, where many of its
ingredients can be found in farm fertilizers, but it's reportedly growing
in use in Chicago and the suburbs.
State officials share the concern. At the urging of Atty. Gen. Lisa
Madigan, the Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously advanced a measure
Tuesday that would sharply increase penalties for meth manufacturers who
endanger children--doubling the maximum sentence to 120 years.
But in Pekin, just south of Peoria, law-enforcement officials have a
campaign going they think is proving effective at the local level.
The idea was born recently when Tazewell County State's Atty. Stewart
Umholtz sorted through before and after pictures of Wood, a meth addict who
has been charged several times with drug offenses.
In the first picture, a police booking photo from a drug arrest in 1998,
Wood was a full-faced, youthful-looking woman. In the second, a 2002
booking photo, Wood is a gaunt and sickly 40-year-old with dry, cracked
facial skin and poor color.
"When I first saw the two, it was apparent the photographs themselves
described the dangers of methamphetamine use better than any words I can
ever use," Umholtz said.
Not long after, Umholtz's office offered a plea bargain that would free
Wood on probation if she would consent to the public use of her photos.
"The state is allowed to use booking photos for drug education purposes,"
the agreement said. "No identifying information shall be used."
Wood signed the document, and as a result prosecutors agreed to lower her
sentence to the 32 days she had already served in the county jail and 4
years of probation. Wood, who had been convicted of drug possession once
before, could have received 30 years of prison time if she had been
convicted of unlawful criminal drug conspiracy.
Her understanding of the agreement, she now says, is that her photographs
would be used in a low-key awareness program, maybe at local drug treatment
and prevention programs. She says she also believed that because Umholtz's
office agreed not to supply her name along with the photographs, no one
would find out who she was.
"It was to be used for drug education purposes only, to keep kids off
drugs," Wood said. "Because that picture would. If that picture doesn't
shock a child, I don't know what will."
Local officials thought so too. Before long, the photos were posted at the
local Boys & Girls Club, the probation office and on the Web site of
Umholtz's office. High school officials also plan to post the pictures, and
police in neighboring jurisdictions have asked for copies.
In accordance with his agreement, Umholtz never released Wood's name in
conjunction with her photos on educational materials. But in Pekin, a city
of 33,000, that hasn't made much difference. Newspapers have run her name
with the photos, and everybody knows who Wood is by now anyway.
The photos they have seen around town have persuaded at least some
teenagers to stay off meth.
"It's disgusting," said Jon Behrends, 18, referring to Wood's photos.
"It made me see what it does to you and the effects that it has on your
body," said Chris Lang, 18.
That reaction is exactly what Umholtz said he had in mind. His intent was
not to punish Wood, he said, but to scare kids away from the drug.
"I have kids who are rapidly approaching their teen years," Umholtz said.
"And every parent's worst nightmare is to have a kid addicted to this drug."
But a mile and a half away from the Tazewell County Courthouse, Wood
hunkers down in her cluttered apartment, chain-smoking Marlboros and
cursing the day she signed the agreement. She said she is in an outpatient
rehabilitation program and that she is clean and sober today.
Her main objection is the public humiliation the dissemination of the
photos has caused her and, she says, her four children and 10 grandchildren
scattered mostly around Tazewell County.
"I have no problem trying to help keep people off drugs because it is
really my life completely," Wood said. "But they went about it wrong. I've
paid for my mistakes. I don't want my grandchildren to keep paying for my
mistakes."
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