Pubdate: Sun, 23 Jun 2002
Source: Commercial Appeal (TN)
Copyright: 2002 The Commercial Appeal
Contact:  http://www.gomemphis.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/95
Author: Nancy Deal, Sandra Pate Prentice, Marie Roach, Judy Lewis, Meldona 
Sulcer-Wills, Michael B. Conway, Sandra Pruett, William J. Padgett Sr.

SCOURGE OF ILLEGAL DRUGS MUST BE ERADICATED

To decrease violence in our neighborhoods, our focus should be on drugs, 
not guns. Anyone who uses or sells illegal drugs has made a decision to 
become a part of a violent organized crime network.

People who use or sell drugs have invited the drug world into their homes. 
They endanger the lives of family members and neighbors. They don't care if 
some of those they put in harm's way are children.

Drug dealers and users have chosen to raise the potential for violence. 
They are inviting death and violence to walk in. When they do, these people 
cannot argue that someone else is to blame, or that they don't know why 
this has happened. They should be held accountable.

Nancy Deal

Memphis
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When drug dealers are evicted from rental properties, where do they go 
(June 19 article, "Grandma's eviction from drug home ordered two years ago, 
Gibbons says")? This would just seem to expand the territory of a drug 
operation.

I have been a renter and a homeowner, and have had neighbors who were drug 
dealers. I have called the police many times to stop their activities, not 
to avoid the problem by getting that bunch moved out and another bunch 
moved in.

This law seems good in theory, but if police did a better job of arresting 
drug dealers and prosecutors, judges and juries did better jobs in the 
courts, the burden of policing a neighborhood would not be left to 
landlords and neighbors.

I would bet that taxpayers are supporting Helen Bea Hobbs and her family 
with welfare and food stamps. If they are evicted, they have the money to 
move to any other neighborhood they choose and set up shop. Apparently they 
have a loyal following and a profitable business.

Perhaps they should rent a house next to the lawyer who plea-bargained a 
community service deal for them, or to the judge who issued a lesser sentence.

Sandra Pate Prentice

Star City, Ark.
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My son, Sundiata Roach, was slain in Memphis on Labor Day 2000. I moved 
from Memphis the following July. I read about the murder of 3-year old 
Jessica Borner, and the article that listed Memphis children who have been 
murdered in recent months. My son was 17 years old and a senior in high 
school when he was killed by a stray bullet. I am sad for the children, and 
I am sad for the city. Memphis has become a killing field. Too many 
families in Memphis are shattered by senseless street violence. My family 
will never be the same. We have moved on, but we always remember Sundi. He 
was talking in a parking lot with friends after a high school party when 
some young criminals drove through and began shooting. When the shooting 
stopped, my son lay dying.

Children should be able to play on a playground, sit in a car, walk down a 
street or stand in a parking lot without fear of losing their life. What 
will be the lasting effects on a generation of children who have lived with 
this threat and have witnessed the murders of loved ones, friends and 
classmates?

The good people of Memphis, law enforcement and the courts must work 
together to get guns and thugs off the streets.

Marie Roach

San Jose, Calif.
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Every article I have read so far about Jessica Borner has skimmed over the 
real reason she is dead. The reason is not "like having suicide bombers," 
as the president of the Memphis Urban League said in your June 16 article 
to explain why young men would spray a house with gunfire. The reason is 
that she lived in the home of a drug dealer.

Judy Lewis

Collierville
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So many women and children, but where are the fathers? Making sure our 
children are relatively safe is the major responsibility of a family that 
includes mother and father figures. Until people take seriously the role of 
heading a household by loving, protecting and teaching morals and values, 
they should not expect police, teachers or day care workers to raise their 
children and take care of the crime in their households and community.

Parents and grandparents need to be role models. How can people place 
children in harm's way by selling drugs in their home? We need to take back 
our neighborhoods by reporting crime and drugs to police, and by not being 
part of the problem ourselves. Too many children have died because of a 
lack of family structure.

Meldona Sulcer-Wills

Bartlett
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Your June 17 Metro section front featured a photo of a man who was teaching 
his son to fire a shotgun. Page 4 of that section was filled with letters 
to the editor from people wondering why our children are being shot down in 
the streets. This irony will escape those who see no connection between 
guns and dead children. The cycle of guns, drugs and death can be stopped. 
But it will require more brains, courage and integrity than our elected 
officials seem to have.

Step 1: More cops on the beat. Stop wasting money on studies and programs. 
The best crime-fighting tool is a cop on the corner.

Step 2: Stop fighting "the violence." People talk about "the violence" like 
it's the "the weather." Fighting "the violence" is how people get rich from 
government programs. The problem is people shooting each other.

Step 3: Stop trying to pray the problem away. Problems are solved by clear 
thinking and hard work. Prayer is neither.

Step 4: Ban the manufacture of guns. There are millions of guns in this 
country. We have enough.

Step 5: Legalize drugs. We can stop drug crime by eliminating the huge 
profits to be made on the black market. Use the tax money raised from drug 
sales to fund treatment programs and put more police on the streets. 
Remember Prohibition? Learn from it.

Michael B. Conway

Memphis
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In many parts of this city, people call police when they know about drug 
dealing and other crimes, but too often police do not arrive until two to 
three hours later.

I have two friends who live in a neighborhood that has been afflicted by 
dope dealers for three years. Calls to police and city government have 
produced nothing.

It is sad to hear politicians tell people who live in these areas that they 
must get involved. When the city doesn't get involved, how can ordinary 
citizens? Should we start vigilante groups? Should we become bounty hunters 
and bring in bail jumpers dead or alive?

Without action from the upper echelons of city government, one of two 
things will happen: Everyone who can move out of the city will, or people 
will take the law in their own hands. Either way, Memphis loses.

Sandra Pruett

Memphis
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How many kids' lives were saved by police stopping cars and writing tickets 
for failure to use seat belts? If these officers had been patrolling the 
streets, breaking up gangs and checking young men for guns and dope, the 
kids who have been killed in Memphis recently might still be alive.

William J. Padgett Sr.

Enid, Miss.
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