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Drug court grads take first step toward new life

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DeKalb County Drug Court graduate Angela Tatroe (right) smiles Friday as she talks to people who have supported her through the program, including her friend, Nicole Holley (left), after the program’s graduation ceremony in the Gathertorium room inside the DeKalb County Legislative Building in Sycamore. (Kyle Bursaw – kbursaw@shawmedia.com)

SYCAMORE – Jacob Minuth wanted to die.

The 23-year-old’s drug addiction landed him in jail and he knew he needed help. He tried to enter the county’s drug program the year before, but was denied and he did not think a second attempt would be successful.

“I remember being in jail and wondering if I fall back maybe if my head hits the cement hard enough I’ll just die,” Minuth said. “But I stand before you today a happy person and that’s saying a lot. I’m working on changing … one day at a time.”

Minuth was one of five people to graduate the DeKalb County Drug Court: Choosing Life and Ending Abuse Now program Friday at the Legislative Center. The voluntary program that started in 2006 requires participants to complete treatment, appear in court, undergo drug testing and more.

Participants receive treatment and rehabilitation in a five-phase program; each phase takes about three months. Participants who do not complete phases as they have agreed to may face sanctions, including community service or redoing phases. In extreme cases, a participant may face jail time or be kicked out of drug court.

But Minuth and his fellow participants cleared their first hurdle to long-term sobriety Friday and were determined to continue.

For Angela Tatroe, a 32-year-old mother of three, the program offered her a second chance to be a mother, sister and daughter.

“What this program gave me back is my family. I lost them all and today I have them all,” she said “In all honesty, I am scared to death [of the future], but it is a healthy scare. I have my family and friends behind me 100 percent.”

Participants were not the only ones who had to overcome challenges in the program this year as administrators and volunteers had to work through an investigation from the county’s state’s attorney.

The program hit a rough patch when former DeKalb County State’s Attorney Clay Campbell decided to investigate it in April after receiving information that a drug court staff member had an inappropriate relationship with a drug court participant. That staff member resigned in June 2011.

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