Pubdate: Sat, 22 Jan 2000 Source: Ledger, The (FL) Copyright: 1999 The Ledger Contact: P.O. Box 408 Lakeland FL 33802 Fax: 863-802-7849 Feedback: http://www.theledger.com/editorial/letters/letter.htm Website: http://www.theledger.com/ Author: John Chambliss, with contribution from Karen Cimino, The Ledger CITY PAYS FOR DRUG PROTESTS LAKELAND -- The War On Drugs Is Getting Noisier. The city is paying a Philadelphia activist $21,000 to organize residents who march to suspected drug houses where they chant and protest. "Drug dealer, drug dealer you can't hide, we charge you with genocide," is a favorite chant. City police identify the drug houses and accompany the marchers. Herman Wrice, the organizer, signed a five-month contract with the city to conduct the marches intended to scare drug dealers out of neighborhoods. Wrice has lead 10 marches in seven Lakeland neighborhoods. Two more will be held today. City Manager Gene Strickland said the city hired Wrice on the recommendation of Police Chief Sam Baca. Strickland supports Wrice's unusual tactics, saying that it takes a multifaceted approach to combat drugs in neighborhoods. He said other methods have not worked. "We have tried everything from code enforcement to blocking off neighborhood streets that have drugs, but nothing has seemed to work," he said. Baca said Wrice is known nationwide for his anti-drug efforts. "He's able to get the community to stand on their own two feet," Baca said. Unlike the police, citizens do not have to watch what they say, Baca said. So officers let citizens say anything to alleged drug dealers and are on hand during the so-called "Take Back the Night" marches to make sure there are no physical confrontations. "This brings police and citizens together," Baca said. A march Dec. 4 resulted in the arrest of Milton Louis Morrison who turned a garden hose on the marchers and officers when they approached his home on East Oak Street. Morrison, 38, was charged with simple battery, resisting an officer without violence and playing loud music. A warrant has been issued for his arrest for failure to appear. Two marches are planned for today. The first will be at 1:30 p.m. off Cleveland Heights Boulevard near Martin's Landing apartments in South Lakeland. The second march will be at 6:30 p.m. in the Seventh Street neighborhood on the city's northwest side. Community residents are asked to gather at Lake Ridge Community Center at 4 p.m. for training. "We show them how to march and teach them some chants," Wrice said. "We try to make druggies feel ashamed that they are selling drugs." The evening march, starting at Brunnell Parkway and Second Street, will be filmed by the show "Anatomy of Crime" for Court TV. Wrice said about 30 people normally show up. He said the marches are a payback for residents who have to put up with drug dealers. "What we do is extreme but so is selling drugs." Wrice said he and his followers once chanted for five five hours in front of a suspected drug house in St. Petersburg. When Baca was asked why police don't just arrest dealers, he said hundreds are arrested yearly, but Wrice's effort was more of a joint venture between citizens and police. Wrice received $5,000 from the city to train 20 police officers for one day in how to use his "Wrice Process." The other $16,000 paid for Wrice's fee to organize residents and for his travel, lodging and meals here. He usually does about a dozen marches in a city and leaves behind a group who can carry on his work. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart