Pubdate: Mon, 11 Feb 2002 Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Copyright: 2002 Cox Interactive Media. Contact: http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28 Author: Fox Butterfield (New York Times) RURAL AREAS FIGHTING DRUGS Police Call Problem 'Beyond Epidemic' Prentiss, Miss. --- The trophy houses, with wrought-iron gates and grand-columned entryways, keep popping up on little country roads here, in clearings in the piney woods and near doublewide trailers. Sometimes, there is a Mercedes or two in the driveway. In the affluent suburbs of Boston, New York or Dallas, these fake chateaus might belong to successful doctors, lawyers or software company owners. But Prentiss, a small town in south-central Mississippi, has no industry or affluent professional class in the conventional sense. The last sizable factory moved to Mexico three years ago, leaving an unemployment rate of 25 percent. Instead, the police say, these houses belong to drug dealers made rich by a flourishing business in crack, methamphetamines, marijuana and OxyContin, the prescription painkiller. They are the most visible manifestation of an explosion of rural drugs and crime that is overwhelming local law enforcement agencies and bringing the sort of violence normally associated with poor neighborhoods of big cities. The upsurge has been felt across the United States from Maine to Oregon and from Georgia to Texas, even as drug use in most cities has been declining. In December, for example, Ron Jones, one of five members of the Prentiss Police Department and the son of the police chief, was shot to death as he entered an apartment to serve a search warrant for drugs. It was the most recent of 14 homicides in the last two years in Jefferson Davis County, which has 14,000 residents, giving the county a homicide rate of 50 per 100,000. That is higher than the rates of Detroit, Washington and New Orleans --- cities that regularly have the highest homicide rates in the nation. Nationwide, while the rate of arrests in drug crimes has fallen 11.2 percent in cities with more than 250,000 residents over the last five years, it has risen 10.5 percent in rural areas, according to the FBI. Even more striking, from 1990 to 1999, the last year for which figures are available, the percentage of drug-related homicides tripled in rural areas but fell by almost half in big cities. To measure the problem another way, a continuing survey of drug use among junior high and high school students by the University of Michigan has found that crack is now more widely used among eighth-, 10th- and 12th-graders in rural areas than among those in metropolitan areas. Methamphetamine use is now highest in rural areas among all three grades, and heroin use is about equal in urban and rural areas, the survey found. The spread of drugs in the countryside is uneven, the experts say, with heavy concentrations of certain drugs in some counties. In Washington County, for instance, at the far northeastern corner of Maine, prosecutions in crimes involving OxyContin are 10 times what they were in 1998, say law enforcement officials, who estimate that at least 1,000 of the county's 35,000 residents are addicts. "It's gone beyond the epidemic stage," Sheriff Joe Tibbetts said. "I can't think of a family in Washington County that hasn't been scathed by it in some way." His officers' families are among those who have been affected, Tibbetts said. One reason for the growth in rural drug problems, federal officials say, is that aggressive prosecution in cities has led dealers to seek safety in the farms and forests of rural counties, which have far fewer law enforcement officers. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager