
OKLAHOMA
Offender program puts girls on new
path
Three years ago, when the head of a state juvenile detention facility
volunteered to accept all the female juvenile offenders in Oklahoma, the
move was greeted with looks of disbelief and in some cases pity.
Today, however, the Central Oklahoma Juvenile Center has created a
treatment program specifically for female offenders, and the program has
become a model for other programs designed just for girls.
“We have a lot of people from other states who want to come in and see
our program,” said Gene Christian, executive director for the Office of
Juvenile Affairs. “Very few states treat their female offenders
dramatically different than their male offenders.”
In Oklahoma, stemming the tide of adult female convicts is a priority.
The state puts more women in jail, per capita, than any other.
At the juvenile level, officials are trying to treat problems that might
otherwise send a girl down the path toward life as a criminal adult. The
program for girls, whose crimes ranged from first-degree murder to
assault and battery, is the first of its kind in Oklahoma.
In the past, female offenders were placed where space was available and
the treatment and therapy programs were similar to what male offenders
received, said Johnson, Central Oklahoma Juvenile Center’s
superintendent. “They need different things,” Johnson said. “You
can’t try to fit a square peg in a round hole. The girls need to talk
more, they have questions and they have different issues.”
Before the female offender program was put into place, girls who had
been convicted of crimes were sent wherever there were open beds,
usually the L.E. Rader facility in Sand Springs. When female offenders
were consolidated, the Tecumseh facility had to take a look at the
programs available. Boys were playing football and competing in
volleyball tournaments.
The female offenders needed something different. Not all girls wanted to
compete in tournaments or race in swim meets. Instead, the facility
added programs such as quilting clubs, yoga, Girl Scouts and even a
version of “Oprah’s Book Club,” Johnson said.
The uniforms the kids wear also changed. In the past, girls and boys
wore square-cut jeans and different colored Tshirts that corresponded
with their security level at the facility. Now girls and boys wear khaki
pants that are more form-fitting, Johnson said. Girls also have a say in
the type of swimming suits that are issued to teens.
There are 40 beds for female offenders at the Tecumseh facility, and
while the number of female offenders has grown over the past few years,
currently there are only 29 girls at the facility. Systemwide, female
offenders make up about 10 percent of the total number of children
serving time in a juvenile detention facility, according to figures from
the Office of Juvenile Affairs.
Struggling through treatment
While juvenile offenders may have access to swimming pools, book clubs
and radio-controlled airplane clubs, they also have to complete a
treatment plan before being released.
“We hold them to it,” Johnson said. “We hold their feet to the fire, and
if we don’t feel like they’re making progress, we don’t move them on.
Juveniles are not serving a sentence set by a judge, but rather
completing a series of steps that will hopefully make it easier for them
to cope in the outside world where temptation is great and offenders
often fall back into old patterns with family or gangs. The approach
isn’t always popular, but officials say it works better than teaching
kids to be “mini-DOC inmates.”
Seth Trickey and Daniel Dillingham were both convicted of violent
offenses and released from the juvenile system after completing all
their phases of treatment.
Jordan, an 18-year-old from Oklahoma County, has been at the Tecumseh
detention center for a little more than a year. She and her
then-23-year-old boyfriend were convicted of killing Jordan’s mother.
Her mother had objected to their relationship, Jordan said.
Jordan is a soft-spoken, petite girl with a bright smile and soft voice.
While being in treatment, she’s had to understand her crime and her own
personal weaknesses. “I had a bad attitude when I came here. I didn’t
care about anything, and you couldn’t tell me anything,” she said.
“There are things you do, that you don’t realize are antisocial or
anything. But when I came here they started pointing those things out to
me, and that was hard at first.”
Jordan has progressed, but still has plenty to work on. But while being
at the juvenile detention facility, she’s realized she has choices and
goals for her life. “Before I came here, I didn’t have any goals,” she
said. “I was working as waitress in a restaurant, my mom was a waitress
in a restaurant. I probably wasn’t even going to finish high school. I
like myself a lot more now.”
Now she wants to pursue a cosmetology license and then eventually become
a counselor, she said.
“I think I could help a lot of people,” she said.
For Johnson, who has worked with troubled youth for nearly 24 years,
giving kids a second chance is his motto. “A lot of times kids get to
come here to be kids,” he said. “Some of them have never been to the
movies before when the come here. ... We’ve just got to give them a
chance to make positive choices.” Jordan, 18, of Oklahoma City was
charged with killing her mother. She is serving time at Central Oklahoma
Juvenile Center in Tecumseh.
Julie Bisbee
2 September 2008
http://newsok.com/offender-program-puts-girls-on-new-path/article/3291851/?tm=1220358721