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We design personalized treatment programs to provide each abuser with the greatest chance of a successful recovery outcome. Our comprehensive networking system works hand in hand with all of the drug treatment centers in Wyoming. At Drug Rehab Wyoming we know that each individual is unique and are treated as such. Deciding upon a treatment option in Wyoming, or anywhere can be a daunting task for any individual or family, we will guide you through each step of a comprehensive treatment plan for you or your loved one. We are determined in our mission, that every drug and/or alcohol abuser in Wyoming. that has a desire to change their life will be given a chance to recover from their addiction and we are dedicated to ensuring that they are given the opportunity to do so.

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The Meth Menace: Wyoming judge points to societal issues

Wyoming Chief U.S. District Judge William Downes won't "just say no" or "get tough on drugs" to wage a "war on drugs" to fight methamphetamine in Wyoming, he said Thursday.

As the top federal judge in the district of Wyoming, Downes has seen the criminals and their victims, and the causes and effects of what he called "this burgeoning tragedy," he told participants at the Wyoming statewide methamphetamine awareness conference at the Casper Events Center.

Downes poked holes in some commonly held beliefs and offered some solutions to the complex problem.

"The war on drugs" suggests a one-dimensional approach for dealing with methamphetamine, which affects every segment of society, Downes said. "Drug addiction does not arise in a vacuum."

Addiction occurs from abuse, neglect, poverty and lack of educational opportunities, among other causes, Downes said.

Drug distribution happens because of addiction, greed and a failure to enforce immigration laws, he said.

It occurs, he added, in places that not too long ago would have seemed unimaginable, such as Powell and Cody.

In the past year, Downes presided over trials of what he called "the Park County conspiracy" that involved about 70 individuals who brought cocaine and methamphetamine from Yakima, Wash., to sell in Cody, he said.

While some of the defendants were "not sympathetic characters," others were very poor or young, yet they received five- to 10-year sentences because of the mandatory minimum sentencing guidelines passed by Congress, he said.

Downes recalled one defendant, age 19, who had minor behavioral problems as a child and then attention deficit disorder.

The defendant began self-medication with alcohol, then cocaine, then methamphetamine, Downes said.

The drug mastered him and he had to resort to selling to pay for it, he said.

During sentencing, he faced the courtroom where his mother mouthed "I love you," and he convulsed in tears as Downes read his sentence, he said.

The mother is as much a victim as her son, Downes said. "A loving mother does time with her child."

Addiction is an illness, and society needs to address that beyond 30 days of rehabilitation in a clinic, he said.

Drug distribution is inherently violent, Downes said, adding that he disagrees with those who believe that legalization will resolve that.

This synthetic substance is the second drug of choice in Wyoming, Downes said. "I know the first drug of choice, and so do you."

Society sends contradictory signals about drug use when it condemns methamphetamine but condones open containers of alcoholic beverages in vehicles, and parents reserve hotel rooms for their children to drink on prom night, he said.

The lax to nonexistent enforcement of immigration laws, Downes added, contributes to the methamphetamine problem because Mexican drug traffickers will hide among other illegal immigrants.

Those lawless employers found in every Wyoming county, Wyoming need to be punished, he said.

But nothing will happen until the Immigration and Customs Enforcement arm of the Department of Homeland Security becomes responsible and hires more agents in Wyoming to investigate these employers, Downes said.

"Let me say to every Wyoming citizen who ... knowingly hires and keeps on their payroll an illegal alien, I look forward to the day when I see you get the due process of law," he said. "If a jury convicts you of the crime with which you have been charged, I will be happy to make you pay the consequences of your lawlessness."


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