Current Temp: 72°


News > Special Reports > A New Dawn
CHAPTER 1 — Sunday, October 14, 2007

To avoid prison, she must get clean

MMEEHAN1@HERALD-LEADER.COM

"I messed up," reads the plea in careful, girlish script. "I used. I don't know why or what's wrong with me. ... I thought I didn't have a problem, that I could just quit. But I'm wrong. How can all those other people just quit? ... What if I can't get better? I don't want to be this way anymore. ... I want to be normal again."
Editor's blog: How the story developed
See the pages (PDFs)

The 'carrot' is help; the 'stick' is jail

MMEEHAN1@HERALD-LEADER.COM

During the past decade, the number of participants in Kentucky's drug courts has grown from 16 to more than 1,726. By the end of 2007, drug courts will serve every Kentucky county.

A limited few get the limited resources

MMEEHAN1@HERALD-LEADER.COM

If you don't have health insurance, prepare for a long wait for drug or alcohol treatment in Kentucky. Partly that's because those in drug court and others get first dibs on limited government funds.



CHAPTER 2 — Monday, October 15, 2007

In God she trusts — for now

MMEEHAN1@HERALD-LEADER.COM

Don Lloyd — Brother Lloyd — stalks across the church basement, pacing in front of a small kitchen used by ladies on Sunday to heat casseroles and pies. But Brother Lloyd's message is food for the soul."

This is your brain on drugs: haywire

MMEEHAN1@HERALD-LEADER.COM

Understanding the reaction of the brain to drugs is key to successfully addressing substance abuse — a disease that annually causes nearly 120,000 deaths in the United States and costs billions of dollars, according to the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
What to look for
By the numbers




CHAPTER 3 — Wednesday, October 17, 2007

'Go ahead and kill me'

MMEEHAN1@HERALD-LEADER.COM

Her husband said he was going to kill her. That's what Dawn Nicole Smith writes when she fills out a request for an emergency protective order after a fight with her husband, Tony. She claims that he threw her on the bed, choking her, and told her this was her end.

'You can't teach them hope'

MMEEHAN1@HERALD-LEADER.COM

Treating female alcoholics or drug addicts often requires unraveling the damage of physical and mental abuse that began long before the first drink or drug.
Women on waiting list for treatment

About Dawn's story

Chapter three of six: Four months after being sentenced to Fayette County Drug Court, Dawn Nicole Smith finds out her husband is leaving, and, at 22, she’s pregnant with their fourth child.




CHAPTER 4 — Friday, October 19, 2007

A fragile hold

MMEEHAN1@HERALD-LEADER.COM

Mary Caitlin Smith, affectionately called Sissy Boo, is born in Lexington on Feb. 24, 2005. She has curly hair like her brother David, and a deep dimple on one cheek.

Testing is vital to drug court

Each week, the freedom, family unity and financial security of thousands of Kentuckians hinge on what happens when chemicals contact urine during a drug test.

There's a lot at stake in drug tests, and they're not perfect

MMEEHAN1@HERALD-LEADER.COM

Every week, the freedom, family unity and financial security of thousands of Kentuckians hinge on what happens when chemicals come into contact with urine for a drug test.

About Dawn's story

Chapter four of six: After giving birth to her fourth child, Dawn Nicole Smith, almost 23, has a brief respite from the rigorous regimen required by Fayette County Drug Court.



CHAPTER 5 — Saturday, October 20, 2007

Nowhere else to go

MMEEHAN1@HERALD-LEADER.COM

Dawn Nicole Smith gets $20 for selling an old red Nissan, the same car that took her to jail so long ago.

Dawn's story so far

February 2003: Dawn Nicole Smith steals a prescription pad from a UK dentist's office.

About Dawn's story

Chapter five of six: With her stepfather jailed and charged with incest, a pregnant Dawn Nicole Smith, almost 24, is ordered by Fayette County Drug Court to move with her four children to the safety of a Lexington homeless shelter.
Read Rachel Raines letter to the court on behalf of her son, Larry (PDF)
Drug court program coordinator's e-mail on Dawn (PDF)
Harold Raines' letter in support of his brother, Larry (PDF)
Brenda Raines’ letter (PDF)
Dawn Smith's written statement about Larry Raines (PDF)
Larry Raines' plea agreement, judgment (PDF)
Larry Raines' sentence for drug, wanton endangement charges (PDF)
Dawn's letter to her drug court caseworker (PDF)
Dawn's indictment (PDF)



CHAPTER 6 — Sunday, October 21, 2007

When all is lost

MMEEHAN1@HERALD-LEADER.COM

Tonio Smith stares mutely out the window as his mother, Dawn Nicole Smith, slumps, smoking, in a stained chair. The 8-year-old's eyes are solemn beneath black bangs as his mother stares unseeing into some middle distance.

When should drug users lose their kids?

MMEEHAN1@HERALD-LEADER.COM

Drug court caseworkers seek to maintain a difficult balance between what's best for parents trying to get off drugs and the welfare of their children.
Editor's blog: How the story developed

With drug court's help, some people do get their lives back

MMEEHAN1@HERALD-LEADER.COM

Tough-looking guys with long ponytails and leather jackets leaned forward, heads in hands, as the audience in the auditorium hushed to absolute silence.

Prescription tracker could raise red flag

MMEEHAN1@HERALD-LEADER.COM

While in drug court, Dawn Nicole Smith says, she used her state Medicaid card to pay for painkillers. So, essentially, taxpayers were paying for her treatment for addiction and for her drugs.

See today's pdf

Coverage on the series

In a 10-page NewsPhotographer article, award-winning photographer David Stephenson chronicled his four-year journey following a drug addict trying to survive drug court.
Cover (PDF)
Table of contents (PDF)
Page 1 (PDF)
Page 2 (PDF)
Page 3 (PDF)
Page 4 (PDF)
Page 5 (PDF)

SITE MAP