Pubdate: Sun, 11 Jul 2004 Source: Port Arthur News (TX) Copyright: 2004 Port Arthur News Contact: http://www.panews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3058 Author: Meghan Vital Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) DEALERS MAKE EASY MONEY SELLING METH ON THE STREETS The first step into Wayne Gerard's swiftly spiraling decline into the world of dealing methamphetamine occurred when he lost his job at an area plant shortly after his daughter was born. The baby was screaming for food, bill collectors demanding their money kept the phone ringing constantly, rent was due in just a week and Gerard said he had no clue how he would make ends meet. "My girlfriend was working at a fast food joint," Gerard, a Port Neches resident, said. "We needed money for the baby." The lure of big money and "bling, bling" The former PN-G student said he was waiting to speak to a manager at an area Burger King about getting a job when he ran into old classmate of his in the lobby of the fastfood restaurant. "The guy was shocked to see me sitting there filling out a job application," Gerard said of his old classmate. "When I told him about the baby and how I needed money, he asked me to step outside to talk to him." Gerard's friend brought him to a huge new SUV with shiny rims, a pearly paint job, a booming stereo system and all sorts of other bells and whistles. His former classmate, Gerard said, seemed to have hit the motherload of success. "The car was clean, man, and the guy had diamonds in his ears and a diamond necklace," Gerard said. "This was a guy who barely passed any of his classes when he was in school. I knew something was up." The former classmate of Gerard's said he had a deal to offer the struggling father. He handed Gerard a bag of white powder and asked if his former classmate could get rid of the substance for him, methamphetamine he needed to get off of his hands and wanted to know Gerard would be interested in selling it. "It was meth and I knew it. He told me he would give it to me for free for now and I could keep 75 percent of the profit if I just got rid of it for him," Gerard said. "I didn't know what to do. All sorts of thoughts began going through my mind." Gerard said he had been looking for a job for a few months, but to no avail. He knew he could sell the meth to guys around his neighborhood quickly and after it was all gone, he could go back to looking for a legal job. If he did sell the meth, Gerard said, it would just be for one time and one time only. "I wasn't the drug dealing type. I'd never even done drugs before, man," he said. "I was in the choir in high school and I was into reading books and stuff like that." The offer his classmate laid on the table was too good to pass up in Gerard's eyes and it was a quick way to feed his daughter, pay his rent and take care of a couple of utility bills. "I took him up on that offer and made about $500 in about two hours," he said. "I didn't make that much in a week at my other job at the plant." Addiction to the fast life Instead of it becoming a one-time stint as Gerard had initially planned, he said he found himself falling into the trap of making quick money in the streets. "I could go to a fast food place, slave all day and all night, make minimum wage and still not have enough money to take care of my family," he said. "Or I had the option of hitting the streets for a few hours and ending up with almost a thousand dollars." Gerard began making a name for himself throughout Port Neches he said, and other more rural areas of Southeast Texas. "From Nome to China and Liberty and Raywood and all those areas, I started building up a customer base," he said. The money started rolling in for Gerard and he soon had enough money to pay for daycare for his daughter, buy himself a used car and pay his rent a few weeks ahead of time. He had a connection in a meth lab who would sell him the finished product for a good deal, Gerard said. As money became easier and easier to attain, he said he became more confident in his trade, selling drugs to anyone who requested them. One evening, Gerard said he had plans to meet with a guy who said he needed a lot of meth quick. The guy seemed a little odd to Gerard, but he paid it no mind and agreed to drop the drugs off to a notorious drug house in Beaumont. "I'd gotten the money in exchange for the meth," Gerard said. "I was about to pull off in my car when everything went down." A downfall begins As Gerard began to pull off in his car, a swarm of cars and trucks surrounded his vehicle. Flashing red and blue lights lit up the night and Gerard realized he had fallen prey to an undercover drug operation. "That was the first and last time I went to jail," he said. Though it was his first offense, Gerard was sentenced to jail time, he said, and during his three-year stint in prison, he said he received the biggest emotional blow of his life. "My mother died from cancer," he said. "I wasn't even around to visit her in the hospital. I was doing time for selling drugs when my mother was dying." It was then, Gerard said, that he realized he had to get his life straight. He planned on getting his life together, getting a job and taking care of his daughter, who was now almost 4-years old. Two months after being released from jail, Gerard said he began to grow tired of being turned down when putting in numerous job applications and going on countless interviews. "No one wanted to hire a drug dealer," he said. "People say you can get a job but I really couldn't. I tried for months and no one wanted to hire me. Not even McDonald's." Gerard went back to the street game he knew - selling drugs. Before long, the father of one said his girlfriend began speaking out against his "career." "She made me feel horrible about selling it and would always bring up my mother and how my mother would be so disappointed," he said. "I needed something to ease that pain and that stress." The meth dealer then began using his own product to ease some of the stress and the depression he said was swallowing his life. "I had the stuff and it was mine, so I just went ahead and snorted it sometimes," he said. "Once I started, I understood why people would want to buy it from me. It takes your mind away from whatever your troubles may be." Pretty soon, Gerard said he had nothing to sell because he was using his product himself. After about two months of regular use of the drug, Gerard's girlfriend had to intervene. Turning around a life of crime "She didn't want me around our daughter and I can't blame her. I just broke down," he said. "She brought me to a rehabilitation center in Houston where she knew someone." Gerard spent about six months in the center, and when it was time for him to head back into the world, the Port Neches native said the clinic helped him find a job. For young fathers, or anyone else, easing their way into the world of drugs or thinking about it, Gerard advises steering clear of what appears to be the benefits of drug dealing. "Whether someone is thinking about using or selling, either way it becomes an addiction that is harder than anyone can imagine to get out of," he said. "It's a trap and the only way out is death or prison." Now working as a custodian for a Houston janitorial firm, Gerard said he sees his daughter every week and is even putting aside money from his paychecks to start a trust fund for the 6-year old. "I'm not making nearly as much money as I used to," he said. "But the fact that I can be proud of the way I make my money makes up for it. I know my daughter can be proud and I know my mother is proud of me too." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin