Indiana County Sheriff Revives 'Drunk Tank'

April 3, 2012
An experimental program that could change public intoxication arrest and evaluation procedures may save Indianapolis taxpayers millions of dollars each year.

INDIANAPOLIS

An experimental program that could change public intoxication arrest and evaluation procedures may save Indianapolis taxpayers millions of dollars each year.

The Marion County Sheriff's Office is reviving a concept that was previously known as the "drunk tank" with the department's detox unit.

Officials said more than 100,000 Hoosiers are arrested for public intoxication each year, and most go to the hospital before they go to jail.

The cost of emergency-room treatment and ambulance trips cost taxpayers more than $1,000,000 each year, RTV6's Jack Rinehart reported.

"The (suspects) were able to understand their names, addresses and who they were, but they were still going to Wishard (Memorial Hospital). So, we investigated how Wishard was handling the intoxicated folks. They were literally there just sleeping it off," said Manny Mendez with the Office of Audit and Performance.

Instead of sending suspects to the hospital, the sheriff's department has created a detox unit within the city's Arrestee Processing Center.

Officials said everyone arrested for public intoxication will be admitted to the detox unit for evaluation by the APC's medical staff.

A study by the city's division of internal audit showed that more than 90 percent of the illegally intoxicated individuals transported to Wishard Memorial were never admitted, which means they could have gone to the APC at no expense to taxpayers.

"If we can just capture the people that are just intoxicated, (instead of) the ones that are not otherwise intoxicated, we could save a lot of money," said Lt. Col. Louis Dezelan.

The implementation of the program comes at a much-needed time as the sheriff's department faces a $16 million dollar budget shortfall, with $15 million of the shortage related to health care expenses generated by arrestees and inmates, officials said.

"The bottom line is it's going to save the taxpayers money. That was a brilliant idea to bring (the detox unit) back so that police officers on the street, when they have an intoxicated individual, they now have options," Marion County Sheriff John Layton said.

In just the first two weeks of the program, officials said the detox unit has saved Marion County taxpayers more than $11,000.

Copyright 2012 by TheIndyChannel.com All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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