Pubdate: Wed, 14 May 2003
Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA)
Copyright: 2003 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Contact:  http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28
Author: Tasgola Karla Bruner

DRUG OFFICIAL, EX-USER AGREE ON TREATMENT

The nation's "drug czar" and a former addicted prostitute think alike.

There are millions of people in the United States successfully recovering 
from drug addictions who have valuable experience to pass onto others, but 
they need their communities' support, said John Walters, director of the 
White House Office of National Drug Control Policy.

Leslie Baker, a recovering addict who prostituted herself for drugs, agrees 
with Walters' approach and is ready to help.

Walters visited Atlanta on Monday and Tuesday to promote drug prevention 
and treatment centers, special courts for drug offenses, and community 
involvement.

"Some people think of treatment as a washing machine," Walters said 
Tuesday. "You start out dirty and you go and get clean and it's all done 
but . . . this is really a community effort. You have to be willing to help 
people get their lives back."

Baker, 54, is a graduate of the Fulton County Drug Court Program, one of 
many drug courts around the country and an initiative that Walters 
supports. Baker said her addiction became so strong that she "traded her 
body for drugs."

Today, two years after shaking her addiction, Baker candidly talks about 
her experiences with the hope of motivating young people to avoid her 
mistakes. She'd like to do more of that, with the help of Walters' office.

"I want him to have people like myself go and talk to young kids and have 
some counselors in schools that kids can talk to in private . . . to share 
their problems with, because there are so many problems and secrets those 
kids are carrying. I would like to be the one to do it," she said.

According to the Administrative Office of the Courts, drug courts like the 
one that helped Baker are intended to change offender behavior through a 
team approach that involves judges, district attorneys, public defenders, 
caseworkers, probation officers and treatment providers.

Touring the Vine City and Washington Park neighborhoods of Atlanta near the 
Georgia Dome on Monday night, Walters used the drug activity he found there 
as evidence of the need for community involvement.

"I was in neighborhoods last night that were incredibly ravaged, but in 
that visit I saw blocks of those neighborhoods that had been taken back by 
a combination of public safety efforts and community coalition efforts," he 
said.

"It is not true that we have to be cynical or we have to be victims or we 
have to tread water."

Walters plans a 26-city tour later this year to survey the crime and 
poverty that accompany drugs, and find ways to emphasize prevention and 
treatment.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens