Pubdate: Thu, 25 Sep 2003 Source: Enterprise-Journal, The (MS) Copyright: 2003 The Enterprise-Journal Contact: http://www.enterprise-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/917 Author: Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Frank+Melton DRUG CZAR'S AIM: EDUCATE KIDS Melton Says Most Youths Try To Do Right Thing Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics Director Frank Melton said during appearances in McComb on Wednesday that 97 percent of the youths in the state "are trying to do the right thing." The other 3 percent, he said, will probably have contact with his agents. Melton, who spoke to the McComb High School student body and to the McComb Rotary Club, gave an outline of some of the policies he has enacted since taking over as the state's drug czar. He also encouraged youths to stay in school and avoid the lure of drugs. Melton said his agents will not conduct drug searches on school campuses, as arresting a youth in front of their peers could place a stigma on their character that they may never be able to shake. "We don't search lockers, we don't search kids, we don't do that," he said. "It's about protecting the 97 percent of our kids who are trying to do right." "I'm not going to build a reputation by putting kids in jail, I'm going to build a reputation by keeping kids in school," Melton said at the high school. Melton has also enacted a policy to not release the names of teen drug offenders to the media. "If you go out and make a mistake, what right do I have to go out and embarrass your parents who are trying to do the right thing?" he said. Melton advised the students that if they ever found themselves in trouble - and in front of a judge - they should "simply tell the truth," and make an honest break. "Guys, if I catch you selling drugs, I'm going to take everything that you own all the way down to your ugly tennis shoes," Melton said. "I'm going to take everything that you own. Here's the good news: What you're getting up here at this school no one can ever take from you." Melton also warned the students about what he said is the most dangerous drug in the state of Mississippi - crystal methamphetamine. "If I make a mistake in manufacturing this dangerous drug, it will blow up this entire school and kill all of us," Melton said. "If it's that explosive, just imagine what it does to the human body. "There are two ways out of the drug business, a pair of handcuffs or a coffin, and I've buried enough kids to know that," he said. The MBN Director added that the debate to legalize marijuana in other parts of the United States and Canada hasn't spread to Mississippi yet, but if it does he will resist it. "Marijuana is nothing but a precursor to more dangerous, addictive drugs," he said. But the MBN chief's speeches weren't all about drug policies and informing the public about the latest and most dangerous trends in the drug trade. Melton, who has become well known for confiscating an earring or two from male students during school tours, stayed on the soap box that's made him famous: telling youths to stay in school and present themselves in an image of self-respect. "In America, appearance still counts," Melton said. "Guys, what I'm saying to you is give those earrings to your sisters. Keep your pants on your behind where they belong." Melton, a former Jackson television executive who owns companies in Mississippi, Texas, South Carolina and California, said although he's a multimillionaire, he chooses to live in one of the poorest states in the country and make investments in the enrichment of its people. Melton's family has adopted more than a dozen children and he has paid college tuition for dozens more who, although talented and bright, come from impoverished backgrounds that would doom any chances of higher learning. Gloster native and Ole Mis football standout Chris Collins was one of many students he has sent to college, Melton said. "The best investment I've ever made in my life is on kids like you," Melton said. Melton said he is glad to see the state start to spend more money on education than on its corrections system. "It's more economical to educate you than it is to incarcerate you," he said. He said Mississippi "has allowed too many excuses for failure" for its young people in the past, and that trend is starting to be reversed. "I'm tired of kids coming up and telling me that they're in a GED program and they don't even know what GED stands for," Melton said. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk