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The
Founder William Benitez
On
August 2, 1965, William Benitez, an inmate at Arizona State Prison
jumped down from his double bunk in the old cellblock where he was
housed and made the following notation on his wall calendar: Decision
to set up Narcotic Foundation. He also circled the 18th of
the same month, his target date to approach prison officials to
request permission to set up a drug rehabilitation program inside
the prison walls. 
Officials denied permission for the following six months. Mr. Benitezs
request to start a program consisting of twenty convicted drug addicts
caused concern to officials who feared such a program might pose
a security problem (such programs were rare in prisons during that
decade). Officials had little reason to believe that the request
of a habitual drug addict and repeatedly convicted felon would result
in one of the nations most successful rehabilitation programs
for substance abusers.
Mr.
Benitez persisted and finally assured officials the program was
needed and would not pose a threat to the safe and orderly operation
of the prison. After being allowed to start the program on a trial
basis, he founded the NARCONON program (NARCOtics-NONe) on February
19, 1966.
Today,
the Narconon program has spread from that one program in Arizona
State Prison to include community programs in many states and countries
such as Denmark, Italy, Holland, Germany, France, Sweden, Spain,
Canada, Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Mexico, Colombia, Switzerland,
New Zealand, South Africa, Ghana, the United Kingdom, Australia,
Indonesia, Taiwan, Argentina and Brazil.
Until
he died from a sudden illness in 1999, Mr. Benitez was a Hearing
Officer with the Arizona Department of Corrections, the same system
which once kept him under lock and key.
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