The Sheriff and the Country Boy

I meet a lot of great folks as I talk about Dreamland across America – and hear amazing stories, too.

In Richmond, Virginia recently, where Virginia Commonwealth University had chosen Dreamland as the Common Read for their incoming freshmen, I happened to meet Sheriff Karl Leonard, of nearby Chesterfield County.

We got to talking about a recovery pod – which he calls the Heroin Addiction Recovery Program (HARP) – he instituted in his jail. HARP allows inmates to begin their recovery from addiction, with a nurturing, inmate-led environment. This replaces the stress and tedium of traditionally run jail.

Traditional jail has always been a prod to crime and drug addiction. But sheriffs like Karl Leonard are rethinking how it’s done. I find this transformation of jail, which is growing as a response to our opiate-addiction epidemic, to be one of the most radical and positive ideas happening in America today.

I wrote about another jail, in Kenton County, Kentucky, doing the same thing a while back.

Later, Sheriff Leonard sent me an email with the following story. Please read:

__________

I work very hard with our Heroin Addiction Recovery program (HARP) to educate the public and to break down the stigma that is attached to not only being an addict but a criminal as well. I take recovered addicts from our program out into the community all the time so they can put a face with this disease. And once I do that I have personalized this crisis with them and they can no longer look away. I have these addicts tell their stories which are always compelling and gut wrenching. But just when I think I have heard it all, I get educated myself.

Just a few weeks ago after one such public engagement in the community with two of the HARP members, one male and one female, I decided to take them to lunch at a local Burger King as a reward, which I do often. (They are placed in civilian clothes when we take them out of the jail).

When we pulled into the Burger King parking lot, the male asked me what this was. I was dumfounded by the question and told him it was Burger King. I then asked him if he’d ever been in a Burger King before, thinking he was messing with me. But he said no. I then asked him if he was ever in a McDonald’s before; he again said no.

I shrugged it off and took him inside. He spent several minutes looking at the menu above his head like a child on Christmas morning. He turned to me and asked me if he could get whatever he wanted. I said yes. He then asked me if he could get the biggest thing on the menu and I again said yes, knowing that jail food probably didn’t satisfy this 6’4”, strapping 26-year-old. He then ordered the mushroom Swiss triple burger and a large Coke and fries.

I watched him devour his meal. I asked him if he liked it and he replied he did very much, especially the Coke. I asked him if he had Coke before and he told me he had not. This kid who never had a Burger King or McDonald’s hamburger or a Coke is a heroin addict.

He told me he grew up in a very rural county in Virginia and his father was very strict with him about eating junk food, sugars, sodas, etc. His father made sure they only ate good fresh food without sugars. It is also why he led a life that was drug free – not even marijuana.

His father also helped him with his athletic skills, which helped him become a very good football player in high school. So good he was given a scholarship to play football at a prominent four-year university in our state. I was intrigued by how this seemingly innocent guy became a heroin addict.

Then the common thread to almost all of our heroin addicts revealed itself.

While at the university, he said, he was involved in a bad car crash and suffered a broken femur, shoulder, and other bones. Eventually his doctor gave him Oxycontin and Dilantin pills. He was directed to take four Oxycontin pills a day for 30 days in addition to the Dilantin.

Once the prescriptions ran out he said he started to become very sick but he didn’t know why. He spoke to a friend who told him he was in withdrawal from the painkillers, which was causing his sickness. So he went back to his doctor, who refused to prescribe him any more. He was very sick and tried to get pills on the street but they were hard to get and expensive so he turned to heroin. And that was all it took.

He eventually had bad drug screens at school and was kicked out of the university and lost his full scholarship. When his father found out he was using drugs he disowned him. So now, without a dorm room or family to take him in, he turned to criminal activity to sustain his life.

These stories go on and on. They are all heartbreaking but also examples of how these are not bad people trying to be good but sick people trying to get well. And we are making a difference here with our very unconventional approach to recovery.

Thank you for enlightening a Nation with your book!

Karl

5 Comments

Filed under Dreamland, The Heroin Heartland

5 Responses to The Sheriff and the Country Boy

  1. Farr Curlin

    Hi, I think you mean “Dilaudid” in this posting, not “Dilantin”. The former is a narcotic used for “breakthrough pain” when someone is on oxycontin or another long acting drug. The latter is for seizure disorders.

    I just finished Dreamland. Thank you so much. That was one of the more important books I have read in my life. I feel like scales have fallen off my eyes. It makes me reassess my own practice of medicine and my approach to pain.

  2. Frank

    Ok here we go! I’ve been an addict since the late70’s I was shooting coke and heroin by the time I was 17yrs old and lost everything many times over I’ve been clean for 18yrs then I had a 60mph motorcycle accident and I was in the hospital for 4months I had 6 operations on my leg they sent me home with prescriptions for Valium dilladid morphine and OxyContin
    I was hooked all over again , so I got up after a couple of days and flushed everything and was sick as hell and I couldn’t walk and I was also alone
    Fast forward the accident happened July 2015 , February 2017 the doctors had to take out the hardware , they opened my leg and foot in 4 different places and sent me home the same day and just doubled my pain meds
    I wasn’t so lucky this time and within a couple of days the stitches split and within a week I was arrested because I finally flipped out
    Nobody wants make these doctors responsible or the drug companies responsible
    IF YOU WANT FUNDING GO AFTER THE DOCTORS AAND DRUG COMPAANIES AND THE US GOVERNMENT FOR LETTING ALL THE HERION AND COKE OVER THE BORDER

  3. Cheryl

    Sam, I met you in Worthington, OH at a church about 2 yrs ago. I live in Dublin a wealthy community by many peoples observations. My son passed in 2014 at the age of 22. It started from a broken foot (football injury). My brother in law is Brad Koffel http://bradkoffel.com who hired Scott Vanderkarr. https://www.koffellaw.com/
    In my heart I believe that god gave you the gift to write, but writing Dreamland is not your legacy. Your legacy is through your writing efforts to touch and help and to make a change in this horrific epidemic. You are more than just a man walking with a gift to heal. Your an angel that god has sent to help heal.

  4. I am a recovering alcoholic (also addicted to Valium). I was fortunate to receive treatment, 43 years ago, from an enlightened facility: I was taught that addiction was a disease to be managed not a criminal or an issue of character to be punished.

    We have to manager our health issues just like a diabetic does with good lifestyle habits, healthy relationships and finding work that gives us purpose.

    I loved “Dreamland” and recommend it all the time.

  5. Brian Beckner

    I was intrigued by the fact that the young many went to a college on a scholarship and had never visited or ate at a fast food restaurant?

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