Pubdate: Sun, 20 Oct 2002 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 2002 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78 Author: New York Times OFFICIALS HOPE FIRE WILL INSPIRE DRUG FIGHT Baltimore Blaze Killed Activist Mom And 5 Of Her 6 Children BALTIMORE - In this city where 60,000 people, about 1 in 10 residents, are addicted to narcotics, a simple message appears on billboards, police cruisers, city buses, T-shirts, brochures and in TV commercials: "Believe." That slogan from a $2 million anti-drug campaign Baltimore began six months ago, is part exhortation, part call to action, part desperate plea to take back the neighborhoods, to report drug dealers, to seek drug treatment, to become a police officer or a mentor to a troubled youngster. But for many, it became harder to believe last week that the war on drugs and violence can be won. Angela Dawson had believed enough to confront dealers outside her East Baltimore row house and report them to the police - -- with horrific results. Early Wednesday, Dawson, who was 36, and five of her six children died in their house in a fire that authorities said a 21-year-old drug dealer set in retaliation. Dawson's husband, Carnell, was struggling to live after suffering serious burns over half his body. Now, Baltimore is trying to come to grips with what Mayor Martin O'Malley calls "the most barbaric act in the recent history of our city." O'Malley, who has made crime-fighting the chief goal of his administration, praised Dawson's anti-drug crusade and clung to the belief that those six deaths would galvanize the city. "There are a lot of us who have been asking what will make us stand up and say, 'Enough is enough.' Maybe this it," said O'Malley, a Democrat. He found small signs of hope, such as seeing Dawson's mother at a funeral home Friday wearing a black T-shirt that said "Believe" in white letters. The fire drew calls for more police officers in drug-ridden neighborhoods, and a few city and state lawmakers went so far as to suggest bringing in state troopers or even the National Guard to rid inner-city neighborhoods of drugs. On Thursday and Friday, at closed-door meetings attended by the city's police commissioner, city and state lawmakers, there were often heated exchanges and criticism of what many view as inadequate police protection and a criminal justice system that routinely returns violent offenders to the streets quickly. "The Police Department locks drug dealers up, they make cash bail and they're out again," said state Sen. Nathaniel McFadden, D-Baltimore City. "It's a revolving cycle that we are going to break." McFadden, who spent much of the day on the streets near the charred row house in his district, said he would push for more crime-fighting help from the governor, the Legislature and the Maryland congressional delegation. "Just like resources have been made available for fighting al-Qaida and Osama bin Laden, we want the same thing available for the citizens in Baltimore City," McFadden said. "We consider this an absolute terrorist attack on the community, and we're going to respond accordingly." Downtown at a hearing Friday, Darrell Brooks, the 21-year-old suspect, was ordered held without bond on six counts of first-degree murder, arson and related charges. The Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services said Friday that an officer assigned to supervise Brooks, who was placed on probation for a car-theft conviction in April, never tried to reach him even after he failed to make contact. Prosecutors read witnesses' accounts that described Brooks kicking open the door of the Dawsons' home after 2 a.m. Wednesday, pouring gasoline on the floor and igniting it, then returning to his house a few doors away. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth