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Saturday, August 16, 2025

Rehab can keep you out of jail — but become a prison itself

 Chris Koon didn’t read the fine print. Sitting in the Cenikor Baton Rouge rehab center’s intake office in 2015, flanked by his mom and grandmother, he signed where told.

“A lot of it read like legalese,” writes Shoshana Walter in “Rehab: An American Scandal” (Simon & Schuster, Aug. 12). “Incomprehensible but also innocuous, like something you might see before downloading an app on your phone.” Koon felt lucky. He wasn’t going to prison.

Just days earlier, he’d been arrested for meth possession. The alternative to five years in state prison? A brutal two-year Cenikor inpatient program. Koon took the deal.

In signing the intake documents, he agreed to “receive no monetary compensation” for work he did, with wages going “directly back to the Foundation.”

The cover art of Shoshana Walter’s new book “Rehab: An American Scandal” released on Aug. 12.

He signed away his right to workers’ compensation if injured. He forfeited his food stamps, disability payments and any other government assistance. And he agreed to “adopt appropriate morals and values as promoted by the program.”

Koon’s story isn’t an outlier — it’s a glimpse into what Walter calls “America’s other drug crisis.” While overdoses and opioid deaths dominate headlines, far less attention goes to the “profit-hungry, under-regulated, and all too often deadly rehab industry,” writes Walter.

Across the country, thousands of treatment programs are propped up by federal policies and rooted in a distinctly American blend of punishment and personal responsibility.

People were “lured to rehab with the promise of a cure for what ailed them,” Walter writes, “only to repeatedly falter and fail inside a system that treated them like dollar signs.”

The idea hard labor can cure someone isn’t new. After the Civil War, US slavery was abolished except as punishment for a crime. That loophole became the foundation for a forced-labor system that conveyed newly freed black people into prisons and chain gangs. Over time, prison officials began marketing this arrangement as “rehabilitation.”

As Walter writes, this legacy has been repackaged for the modern drug crisis.

The Affordable Care Act promised expanded treatment access through Medicaid. But the rehab industry that exploded in response was lightly regulated, profit-driven and increasingly dangerous. The result: thousands of people like Chris Koon, lured into treatment by courts, cops or family members, only to find themselves stuck in a system that looked less like therapy and more like punishment.

They include women like April Lee, a black woman from Philadelphia. Despite growing up in addiction’s long shadow — her mother died from AIDS when Lee was just a teenager, after years of selling sex to support a crack habit — Lee didn’t start using drugs herself until after having her second child, when a doctor prescribed her Percocet for back pain. That opened the door to addiction.

Child-welfare authorities eventually took her kids. Fellow users nicknamed her “Mom” and “Doc” for her uncanny ability to find usable veins, no matter how damaged.

April Lee from Philadelphia entered recovery in 2016, but returned some time later, working as an unpaid house monitor in exchange for a bed.April Lee / ACLU

She entered recovery in 2016. Every morning at 6, 18 women gathered in the dining room of one of two overcrowded houses to read from the Bible.

Lee stayed 10 months. With nowhere else to go, she returned — this time as a house monitor, working without pay in exchange for a bed. “She was still early into recovery, and she felt stressed by the intensity of the job,” Walter writes. “On top of that, she wasn’t getting a paycheck, so she couldn’t save up money to leave.”

“Don’t really know how to feel right now,” Lee wrote in her journal. “The lady I work for — for free, mind you — wont me to watch over women witch mean I have to stay in every night.” She felt physically and emotionally trapped. “I wanted to snap this morning. Miss my children so much.”

Like so many others, Lee found herself stuck in the recovery-house loop — forced to work, unable to leave and earning nothing. She helped with chores, mainly cooking and cleaning. Residents’ food stamps stocked the kitchen. Lee loved to cook, and she made comfort food for the house: mac and cheese, fried chicken, beef stew. But all the warmth she gave others couldn’t buy her a way out.

For others, like Koon, it was about more than just forced labor. During his first 30 days at Cenikor, the other patients policed each other. If one person broke a rule, the entire group might be punished with a “fire drill” in the middle of the night. “If anyone stepped out of line or did something wrong during the drill, they’d have to stay awake even longer,” Walter writes.

Discipline was obsessive. In his first month, Koon sat in a classroom with about 30 other residents, most sent by courts like he was, reciting rules out loud, line by line. There were more than 100. “He could get in trouble for not having a pen, not wearing a belt, for an untied shoelace, for leaving a book on the table, for his shirt coming untucked,” Walter details.

Cenikor got sued over its rehab centers, like this one in Corpus Christi, Texas.Cenikor

Koon learned the punishment system fast. A common one was “the verbal chair,” in which any participant could order him to sit, arms locked and knees at a 90-degree angle, and stare silently at the wall while others screamed at him. “Go have a seat in the verbal chair. Think about having your shirt untucked,” they’d say. And Koon, like everyone else, was expected to respond, “Thank you.”

There were others. “Mirror therapy,” where he’d stand and yell his failings at himself in the mirror. “The dishpan,” where he’d be dressed in a neon-green shirt, scrubbing floors and dishes while loudly reciting the Cenikor philosophy, “a paragraph-long diatribe about self-change,” Walter writes. And the dreaded “verbal haircut,” when another resident, sometimes even a staff member, would berate him as part of his treatment.

Dressed up as a therapeutic community, Koon thought instead, “This is like a cult.” Walter believes he wasn’t far off.

Everyone was required to tattle. Koon had to turn in weekly at least 10 “pull-ups” — written reports detailing rule infractions committed by fellow residents. If he didn’t, he could lose points and with them privileges like phone calls, family visits or permission to grow a mustache.

Confrontations were public and ritualized: Residents would sit in a circle around one or two people forced to listen as everyone else denounced them. “They took turns confronting that person, professing their faults and errors, while the person was permitted only to say ‘thank you,’” Walter writes. Staff called it “The Game.”

He saw grown men cry. He heard women called bitches and sluts. He realized many employees were former participants enforcing the system that once broke them.

Not everyone saw a problem. Many in the legal system embraced tough-love rehab programs, especially judges looking for alternatives to jail. One of Cenikor’s biggest champions was Judge Larry Gist, who ran one of the first drug courts, in Jefferson County, Texas, in the 1990s.

“The vast majority of folks that I deal with are basically bottom-feeders,” Gist told the author. “They’ve been losers since the day they were born.” Cenikor’s extreme model was ideal for “the right people,” he believed.

Cenikor rewarded such loyalty, giving judges and lawmakers steak dinners served by participants and annual awards banquets, complete with gleaming, diamond-shaped trophies. Gist “proudly displayed his” in “his chambers, where he liked to host his happy hours with prosecutors and defense attorneys.”

Koon was booted out of Cenikor after just two years, for faking a urine sample and contracting a contagious staph infection, but managed to stay sober on his own. He proposed to his childhood sweetheart, Paige, moving in with her two daughters, and finding the stability he’d been chasing for years. He went back to school to learn welding, and the daily rhythms of family life kept him grounded. “He hasn’t taken a drug recreationally for eight years,” Walter writes.

Lee’s path out took longer, and her recovery was, as Walter writes, “in some ways a stroke of luck.” She left the house after landing a job at a law firm that helped women reunite with their children in foster care — a world away from the nights she’d once spent tricking at the Blue Moon Hotel but one that barely covered her bills and pushed her just over the poverty line, cutting off assistance. She earned her GED, took online college courses, regained custody of her kids and bought her own home by 2021. “And yet many days she felt she was teetering on the edge, one crisis or unpaid bill away from making a terrible mistake,” Walter writes. That year, she returned to Kensington, where her addiction had once thrived, bringing fresh food and water to people still living on the streets.

As for Cenikor, its time in the shadows ended, at least temporarily. Investigators found evidence of exploitation: residents forced to work without pay, unsafe housing conditions, staff-client relationships, even overdoses inside the facilities. The state of Texas fined Cenikor more than $1.4 million in 2019, but the agency struck a settlement, and it continued to operate.

Koon and Lee don’t represent everyone who’s experienced addiction, treatment or recovery. But they do reflect a system that often promises far more than it delivers. “When rehab works, it can save lives,” Walter writes. “It can mend families and be among the most redemptive narrative arcs in a person’s life.”

But sometimes, rehab not only fails to help people, it actively harms them, recycling them through a gauntlet of relapse, shame and risk: “Despite the rehab industry’s many claims, there is no magical cure for addiction.”

https://nypost.com/2025/08/16/us-news/rehab-can-keep-you-out-of-jail-but-become-a-prison-itself/

Trump backs security deal for Ukraine following high-stakes summit with Vladimir Putin

 President Trump has committed in principle to providing “security guarantees” to Ukraine to safeguard its frontier from Russia following a possible peace deal, The Post has confirmed.

The precise contours of those security guarantees, which were discussed by Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Anchorage on Friday, remain unclear, however. Trump has not committed to sending US troops and previously ruled out NATO membership for Ukraine.

The security may amount to a European-led initiative with America’s support, a source familiar with the talks said.

President Trump discussed the possibility of giving Ukraine a “mutual defense” deal.AP

French President Emmanuel Macron and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer offered to send peacekeeping troops to Ukraine earlier this year, which would place on their nations’ shoulders the human and financial cost of shielding Kyiv after the US has already spent $200 billion since Moscow’s invasion began in 2022.

The US has a mutual defense agreement with the UK and France, meaning that their presence on the frontlines would offer a form of protection to Ukraine resembling NATO membership — Trump has adamantly rejected formal admission of Kyiv to the military alliance — which Putin vehemently opposes.

Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization maintains that if one NATO is attacked, it would be considered an attack on all 32 members of the group.

The arrangement came after a series of calls between Trump, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and European leaders,Ukrainian Presidential Press Off/UPI/Shutterstock

Ukraine would, as part of the hypothetical peace deal, cede land currently occupied by Russia.

Such an agreement would obligate Ukraine’s European allies to respond to any future attacks on the country, The Telegraph reported Saturday.

Putin allegedly agreed to the arrangement, according to The Telegraph.

Putin invaded Ukraine in February 2022.Getty Images

But European leaders were trying to clarify what role the US would play under such an agreement, sources told The Economic Times.

The arrangement came after a series of calls between Trump, Zelensky and European leaders, the Agence France Press reported.

“As one of the security guarantees for Ukraine, the American side proposed a non-NATO Article 5 type guarantee, supposedly agreed with [Russian leader Vladimir] Putin,” a source told the AFP.

Word of the potential security guarantee came as it emerged that Zelensky will head to Washington, DC, to meet with Trump in the Oval Office on Monday.

https://nypost.com/2025/08/16/us-news/nato-style-security-mutual-defense-deal-on-the-table-for-ukraine-reports/

Abbott, Rollins announce plans to address screwworm threat on cattle, livestock

 On Friday, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) and Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins publicly addressed plans to fight against the New World screwworm, which has disrupted the livestock and cattle industries.

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, New World screwworms is an invasive species that burrows fly larvae into fresh wounds of living animals like livestock, pets and occasionally people. The damage they cause can be deadly.

During a press conference, Rollins announced a new sterile fly production facility in Edinburg, Texas. The facility will breed three hundred million flies a week.

Additionally, the Trump administration will invest in the development of technology and work closer with Mexico to track the screwworm population.

“We have a lot of data to collect. We have a lot of work to do. But we have to protect our beef and cattle industry in this country,” Rollins said.

Abbott said during the press conference that screwworms, which feed on cattle and deer, could result in billions of losses each year.

“This is an issue that is essential to the cattle industry, to the food supply which are at risk,” Governor Abbott said.

The animal is named after their feeding behavior, with the larvae screwing into the flesh of their victims.

Larry Gilbert, a professor at the Univerosty of Texas and the faculty director of the Brackenridge Field Lab, said he was more concerned about the impact New World screwworms could have on the deer population.

“The deer herds would be very vulnerable to this, and you don’t go around treating wounds on deer. Its hard to find them,” Gilbert said.

In June, the Department of Agriculture reported that screwworms were detected about 700 miles from the southern border. Cattle imports were suspended from Mexico to prevent an infestation in the states.

This drew concern from Abbott earlier in the year. He established a Texas New World Screwworm Response Team.

According to Peyton Schuman, senior director of government relations for the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association, a screwworm outbreak could cost Texas around $1.8 billion in damages to livestock annually.

The state’s hunting industry could also face issues. During the 1960s outbreak, 80 percent of Texas’s white tailed deer died as a result of screwworms.

The species originates in Cuba, Haiti, the Dominican Republic and some countries in South America. The pests were mostly eradicated in the U.S. in the 1960s, but they have occasionally reemerged in Central America and Mexico.

According to the Texas A&M Agrilife Extension office, the population is controlled through the release of sterile males into the population. Using sterile populations for control was developed at the University of Texas in Austin by entomologists, Edward F. Knipling and Raymond C. Bushland.

Signs of an animal infested with the New World screwworm include:

  • Foul-smelling wounds with maggots
  • Animals biting or licking their wounds
  • Lesions in bellybuttons, ears and where branding has occured
  • Lethargy

If an infestation is suspected, Texas A&M Agrilife recommends you contact authorities, like the Texas Animal Health Commission and Texas Parks and Wildlife, and notify your veterinarian.

You should then inspect the animal for signs of infestation and collect any samples to give to authorities. There are several treatment options, including topical treatments.

https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/5456039-abbott-rollins-screwworm-cattle-livestock/

Fleeing High-Cost Blue States? Here's Where Bills Are Lowest

 The U.S. consumer landscape remains mixed. Recent datapoints have painted a softer macroeconomic backdrop, with subpar jobs reports with downward revisions, a pullback in personal spending, two consecutive monthly declines in credit card balances, a record jump in student loan delinquencies, and downward pressure in consumer discretionary stocks. However, July’s consumer report showed an unexpected surge in spending, suggesting resilience so far this summer despite economic headwinds. 

Against this complicated macroeconomic backdrop for consumers, new data from DoxoINSIGHTS’ 2025 State-by-State Bill Pay Market Report provides a granular view of household bill costs nationwide. The report ranks states by monthly expenses, highlighting the most and least expensive places to live. 

Doxo's unique aggregate bill pay dataset shows that consumers spend an average of $2,058 per month on bills, or about 31% of the $84,583 median household income.

The analysis, covering 97% of ZIP codes and 45 bill categories, shows California, Hawaii, New Jersey, and Massachusetts as the priciest states, while West Virginia, Mississippi, Arkansas, and Oklahoma are the cheapest.

Californians face a median monthly bill of $2,854, 39% above the national level, compared with $1,149 in West Virginia, 44% below. The report, based on median payments for 13 major household expenses including mortgages, rent, utilities, auto loans, insurance and telecoms, ranks all 50 states by bill cost.

10 Most Expensive States for Household Bills

10 Least Expensive States for Household Bills

This state-level cost profile can help individuals and employers make more informed decisions when considering job relocations or moves to escape expensive blue states to affordable red states

*   *   * 

View the full report here:

https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/fleeing-high-cost-blue-states-heres-where-bills-are-lowest

Chicago doubles down on ‘sustainable community schools.’ Where are the results?

 Education is the great equalizer, and we believe everyone should have access to a good one.

So we took notice when Mayor Brandon Johnson announced late last week that the city would be nearly doubling the number of so-called sustainable community schools in the city.

What is a sustainable community school? It’s a model — widely supported by teachers’ unions — which turns public schools into community hubs offering services such as housing and food assistance, medical and dental care, mental health support and classes, including parenting or English for non-native speakers.

Right now, Chicago Public Schools has 20 of these schools, but the number is going up to 36 — with more to come after that. Each of these schools costs an extra $500,000 annually, so adding 16 will cost an additional $8 million next year.

You may be asking yourself why, when the district has a deficit of hundreds of millions of dollars it needs to sort out by the end of the month, that Johnson is announcing this. Well, it’s simple: The new Chicago Teachers Union contract requires an additional 50 sustainable community schools by the end of its four-year term. To some degree, the district’s hands are tied.

We should say here that we don’t think the idea of sustainable community schools is meritless. It makes sense that low-income and disadvantaged kids may need more to succeed than just the three Rs.

But is the sustainable community school model the way? Let’s look at the track record of these schools in Chicago.

Chalkbeat reported that since 2018, enrollment at the 20 schools in the program has dropped by 15%, with six of them losing more than a quarter of their students — a far steeper decline than the district as a whole. And many of these schools are among the city’s worst-performing academically.

We’ll allow that numbers don’t tell the entire story when it comes to a program such as this one, but they’re not meaningless either. And so far they’re downright discouraging.

Johnson, the former CTU organizer who has spent his mayoralty attempting to make his former employer’s demands reality no matter how unaffordable or questionable, doesn’t think we should be considering metrics at all.

He dismisses using test scores or graduation rates to gauge success, defining the effort’s worthiness instead as “when every child has everything they need.”

Perhaps that’s because the data don’t support this investment. Even the most ardent public school advocate should never say something like that. Just like any other program, sustainable community schools need to justify their investment, and they do so at least in part by demonstrating measurable success.

Here’s the reality. The situation with Chicago’s low-income kids warrants urgent attention. Among low-income CPS students, just 22% are proficient in reading, 12% in math, and nearly half miss 10% or more school days. Those numbers cry out for meaningful solutions.

Improving this woeful reality is challenging, and schools aren’t well-positioned to be everything to everyone.

The best thing schools can do is help foster stability. An environment of reassuring routines, predictable interactions and secure relationships helps children feel safe and ready to learn.

Here are some extra school services that seem to work.

One-on-one or small-group tutoring, especially in the early grades, provide some of the strongest evidence for boosting achievement. In Mississippi, intensive early-literacy tutoring, among other reforms, helped raise fourth-grade reading scores to above the national average. CPS has made strides with its Tutor Corps program and Tutoring Chicago help, but more is needed.

Before- and after-school programs, summer learning and extracurriculars boost attendance, engagement and outcomes. And pairing students with consistent adult mentors (through Big Brothers Big Sisters, for example) improves graduation rates and reduces disciplinary incidents.

These add-on services boost learning — but only with a solid academic foundation; without it, they risk distraction over results.

Based on the CTU contract, CPS doesn’t have a choice — it has to move forward with these sustainable community schools. If CPS’ own data showed these schools were moving the needle academically, this investment could be justified — but so far, that hasn’t happened. We’re not convinced spending more and expanding on this model is the answer Chicago kids need.

Schools can connect families to outside help, but they cannot become the housing authority, the health department and the social services office without sacrificing their core mission: teaching children to read, write and think critically. When schools try to be everything to everyone, they risk doing nothing well.

So the jury is out on sustainable community schools. Supporters of the concept, including the mayor, should focus on delivering results for students rather than defining success in terms of how many new CTU members are employed.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/editorial-cps-doubles-down-sustainable-100000846.html