Photo: RNZ/Rayssa Almeida
A former addict who spent years moving in and out of jail says the only real way out was through specialist courts that treat addiction.
New Ministry of Justice figures show people who completed the Alcohol and Other Drug Treatment Court (AODTC) reoffended far less than similar high-risk offenders in the District Court.
Australian-born Melanie Rauth was 13 when drugs and alcohol first entered her life after her parents split.
At 20, she moved to Aotearoa - and her addiction deepened. She lost custody of her daughter and spent years moving around, fuelling her drug habit and landing in prison multiple times.
"Being in prison did not help me at all to get well," she said.
"It helped me to build a persona of myself that kept me safe. I learned how to fight, keep my guard up, and get my own way by causing a scene. But it didn't really help me in the outside world when I tried to recover. All those masks that kept me safe were really hard to strip back."
With help from her lawyer, the now-38-year-old was referred to the AODTC, a programme that treats addiction as the driver of offending.
"It is not a softer approach.
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