Pubdate: Wed, 22 May 2002
Source: Denver Rocky Mountain News (CO)
Copyright: 2002, Denver Publishing Co.
Contact:  http://www.rockymountainnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/371
Note: Rocky Mountain News Editor note: Information from: The Monitor
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

SOUTH TEXAS REPS PUSH FOR DRUG TREATMENT CENTER

McALLEN, Texas- South Texas politicians vow to push for money for a drug 
treatment center in the Rio Grande Valley during the next legislative 
session following the apparent overdose death of a 15-year-old Edinburg boy 
last weekend.

Aaron Pea Jr., who will serve House District 20 next year, and state Rep. 
Juan Hinojosa, who will serve in the state Senate next year, said they plan 
to draft legislation securing federal, state and local money needed to 
build a drug treatment and detoxification center in the Valley.

"Too many times people are on the streets addicted to drugs and go to jail, 
where they aren't helped at all," Hinojosa was quoted as saying in 
Thursday's editions of The Monitor in McAllen. "What we need to do is give 
families an option and a way out of drug addiction with a professional 
center where people are rehabilitated."

The apparent drug overdose death of Edinburg High School student Levi 
Hampton on Saturday struck an emotional chord with Pea, whose son, John 
Austin Pea, died from a drug overdose at the same time last year.

That same weekend last year, Samuel Isaac Hernandez, 22, of McAllen and 
Cristanto Garza, 21, of Edinburg died from overdoses of cocaine and heroin. 
The three deaths are believed to be connected to the same drug supplier.

"It's very emotional for me because the boy died on the same day as my 
son," Pea said. "It's hard to see a young boy who had his life in front of 
him taken away to see him lying in a small wooden box with no future."

Jody Guerra, program director at the Palmer Drug Abuse Program, said the 
Valley has few resources to fight a significant drug problem.

"We need any help we can get at this point." Guerra said, noting that 
there's only three outpatient treatment centers in the Valley. "We are in a 
unique situation that separates us from the bigger cities.

"We have a high volume of drugs passing through a concentrated area and 
they are available at a lower cost than up north because we are so close to 
the source."

Police said they are still investigating Hampton's death. Hampton is 
believed to have overdosed on the prescription drug Oxycontin, which is an 
opiate like heroin that is prescribed for severe pain, police said. 
Following the overdose, Hampton slipped into a three-week coma before his 
death on Saturday.

On Wednesday, more than 100 grieving family members and friends filled the 
tiny chapel of First Christian Church for Hampton's memorial service.

"People were just coming in and out of his room talking to him," Hampton's 
mother, Theresa Hampton, said of her son's final weeks in the hospital.

She echoed the calls for help in the fight against drugs in the Valley.

"They're dropping like flies," Hampton said, seething with anger. 
"Something needs to be done. My son was a person, not just another news story."
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