Pubdate:A0Sat, 13A0Jun 1998 Source: Associated Press COUNTY INVESTIGATING 57 DRUG REHABILITATION CENTERS The number of unlicensed alcohol and drug rehabilitation centers believed to be practicing forced aversion therapy grew to 57 as county authorities investigate at least four deaths at such clinics, officials said. County health officials on Friday issued a ``warning'' list of the 57 alcohol treatment centers where patients may have been forced to drink alcohol on the theory that overdosing on it would give them a distaste for drinking. So far, criminal charges have been filed against two clinics stemming from two such deaths. A source close to the investigation told the Los Angeles Times that six other deaths were being investigated and that some patients reportedly were forced to drink poisonous rubbing alcohol. The list was sent to Municipal and Superior Court officials to warn them against referring people sentenced to obtain alcohol and drug counseling to those places. Also, people convicted of crimes in which they are required to attend 90-day treatment programs or Alcoholics Anonymous meetings were given a copy of the list on Friday and told to stay away. ``It concerns us greatly that we may have been referring defendants to these schools if they were unlicensed and using measures that were inappropriate,'' said Peggy Shuttleworth, deputy municipal court administrator. Some of the centers are listed on the latest edition of a Spanish-language Alcoholics Anonymous directory, said Patrick L. Ogawa, head of the Alcohol and Drug Program of the Los Angeles Health Services Department. The county Board of Supervisors has scheduled a special hearing on the matter at Tuesday's board meeting. In one of the deaths, members of a storefront alcohol and drug recovery group, Grupo Liberacion y Fortaleza, allegedly tied up Enrique Bravo on May 25 and force-fed him alcohol. Four men pleaded innocent to one count each of involuntary manslaughter and two counts each of false prisonment in the death of Bravo, 32, of Littlerock. Facilities must obtain a state license only if they are residential, open 24 hours a day and administer drugs, Sharon Wanglin, county Department of Health Services spokeswoman. Organizations offering drop-in counseling, such as Alcoholics Anonymous, do not have to obtain licenses, she said. Wanglin said she didn't know how many of the 57 centers on the list had been recommended by the Health Department because officials hadn't compared the lists. But as of late Friday, a preliminary review showed employees found no suspect facilities on their lists. - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett