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"If we do not maintain Justice, Justice will not maintain us" -- Francis
Bacon
CASA PRESS RELEASE: CRIMINAL NEGLECT - SUBSTANCE ABUSE, JUVENILE
JUSTICE AND THE CHILDREN LEFT BEHIND
ALCOHOL AND DRUG ABUSE AND ADDICTION IMPLICATED IN FOUR OF FIVE
CRIMES COMMITTED BY JUVENILE ARRESTEES
Only 3.6 Percent of the 1.9 Million Substance-Involved Juvenile
Arrestees Receive Substance Abuse Treatment
Califano and Colson Call For Top to Bottom Overhaul of State
Juvenile Justice Systems; Ask Presidential Candidates to Address
This Crisis
WASHINGTON,
October 7, 2004 – Four of every five children and teen arrestees in
state juvenile justice systems are under the influence of alcohol or
drugs while committing their crimes, test positive for drugs, are
arrested for committing an alcohol or drug offense, admit having
substance abuse and addiction problems, or share some combination of
these characteristics, according to a new report released today by
The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA*) at
Columbia University.
The 177-page report of the five year study, Criminal Neglect:
Substance Abuse, Juvenile Justice and The Children Left Behind,
is the most comprehensive analysis ever undertaken of substance
abuse and state juvenile justice systems. The report found that 1.9
million of 2.4 million juvenile arrests had substance abuse and
addiction involvement and that only
68,600 juveniles receive substance abuse treatment.
“Instead of helping, we are writing off these young Americans,” said
Joseph A. Califano, Jr., CASA’s chairman and president and former
U.S. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. “We are releasing
them without attending to their needs for substance abuse treatment
and other services, punishing them without providing help to get
back on track. If the Congress, the governors and the presidential
candidates are serious about leaving no child behind, we must end
the criminal neglect of these children who so desperately need our
help.”
“I
have been there. I have witnessed the deplorable conditions forced
upon these young people,” added Charles W.
Colson,
Founder and Chairman of the Board, Prison Fellowship, the world's
largest outreach to prisoners, ex-prisoners, crime victims and their
families. “The system must be changed to address the needs of these
juveniles and prevent them from living a life crime and drug
addiction.”
The report reveals that drug and alcohol abuse is implicated in 64
percent of violent offenses, 72 percent of property offenses and 81
percent of assaults, vandalism and disorderly conduct.
“Juvenile justice systems were originally conceived as institutions
to help young offenders get on the path to law abiding lives,” said
Califano. “As a result of their failure to address these problems,
they have become colleges of criminality, paving the way to further
crimes and adult incarceration for many of their graduates. We have
51 different systems of juvenile injustice with no national
standards of practice or accountability.”
Other notable findings in this report include:
· At
least 30 percent of adults in prison for felony crimes were
incarcerated as juveniles.
· Ninety-two
percent of arrested juveniles who tested positive for drugs, tested
positive for marijuana; 14.4 percent, for cocaine.
· Up
to three-quarters of incarcerated 10 to 17 year-olds have a
diagnosable mental health disorder.
· As
many as eight out of 10 incarcerated juveniles suffer from learning
disabilities.
· Compared
to juveniles who have not been arrested, those who have been
arrested once in the past year are: more than twice as likely to
have used alcohol; more than 3.5 times likelier to have used
marijuana; more than three times likelier to have used prescription
drugs for non-medical purposes; more than seven times likelier to
have used Ecstasy; more than nine times likelier to have used
cocaine and more than 20 times likelier to have used heroin.
· The
arrest rate for female juveniles increased almost 7.4 percent
between 1991 and 2000 while the arrest rate for male juveniles
decreased almost 18.9 percent.
· The
arrest rate for black juveniles is more than 1.5 times the rate for
white juveniles.
Based on the report’s findings, the CASA report calls for a complete
overhaul of the juvenile justice system to assure that each child
receives a comprehensive assessment of needs, substance abuse
treatment and other appropriate services.
The CASA report is based on 2000
arrestee and juvenile court data, the most recent available in
sufficient detail for this analysis.
The report found that juvenile justice systems cost society
$14.4
billion a year just in law enforcement, courts, detention,
residential placement, incarceration, substance abuse treatment and
federal block grants.
If other costs, such as those for probation, physical and mental
health, child welfare and family services, school and victims are
included; the price would more than double.
A
$5,000 investment in substance abuse treatment and getting other
appropriate services for each juvenile who would otherwise be
incarcerated would pay for itself in the first year if only 12
percent stayed in school and remained drug and crime free.
Moreover, the report found, if we could prevent crimes and
incarceration of 12 percent of substance-involved adult inmates with
juvenile records, we would have 60,480 fewer inmates and 5.9 million
fewer crimes, and we would realize $18 billion in avoided criminal
justice and health costs and in employment benefits.
The CASA report recommends:
· Creating
a model juvenile justice code to set a standard of practices and
accountability for states in handling juvenile offenders.
·
Training all juvenile justice system staff, including juvenile
judges, law enforcement and other court personnel how to recognize
and deal with substance-involved offenders.
· Extending
to juveniles diversion programs such as drug courts.
· Making
available treatment, healthcare, education and job training programs
to children in juvenile justice systems.
· Expanding
Federal grant programs for juvenile justice and delinquency
prevention and conditioning such grants on reform of state systems.
· Developing
state and national data systems to judge progress in meeting the
needs of these children.
The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) at
Columbia University is the only national organization that brings
together under one roof all the professional disciplines needed to
study and combat all types of substance abuse as they affect all
aspects of society. CASA's missions are to: inform Americans of the
economic and social costs of substance abuse and its impact on their
lives; assess what works in prevention, treatment and law
enforcement; encourage every individual and institution to take
responsibility to combat substance abuse and addiction; provide
those on the front lines with tools they need to succeed; and remove
the stigma of substance abuse and replace shame and despair with
hope.
With a staff of 79 professionals, CASA has conducted demonstration
projects in 89 sites in 41 cities and 22 states focused on children,
families and schools, and has been testing the effectiveness of drug
and alcohol treatment, monitoring 15,000 individuals in more than
200 programs and five drug courts in 26 states. CASA is the creator
of the nationwide Family Day initiative—The Fourth Monday in
September—that promotes parental engagement as a simple and
effective way to reduce children’s risk of smoking, drinking and
using illegal drugs.
Source: The National Center on Addiction and
Substance Abuse
http://www.casacolumbia.org/absolutenm/templates/PressReleases.asp?articleid=371&zoneid=56
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