Pubdate: Mon, 02 Aug 2004 Source: Times, The (Shreveport, LA) Copyright: 2004 The Times Contact: http://www.shreveporttimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1019 MOTHER ENLISTS OTHERS IN COMMUNITY'S WAR ON DRUGS LOGANSPORT -- For one Logansport mother, the catch phrase "war on drugs" is more than just words. It's a personal fight to save her family -- and her community. The anguish, misery and embarrassment that once haunted Sissy Morris' life has evolved into a show of strength involving close friends and even strangers who are responding to her "I'm tired and I'm not going to take it anymore" attitude. For 23 years, Morris watched helplessly as her son, now 39, succumbed to a life dependent on illegal drugs. He was doing well until a recent relapse, she said. But it was his fall and eventual plea "to be sent away" that spurred Morris, husband Rusty and close friends Lisa and Michael Deutsch into action. "I told my son, 'No, we're fighting this,'" Morris said. Although she declined to call him by name, Morris said she approached her son and told him of her plans to bring communitywide attention to the drug-trafficking problem in Logansport. "He told me to do whatever I think is best." First, Morris poured out her heart in a letter to the editor that was transformed into a story in The Tribune, a DeSoto Parish newspaper. Within days, the telephone calls started. There even was a letter from a woman in Oklahoma. "I had no idea it would have this type of impact," Morris said. But it didn't stop there. A quickly organized community meeting Thursday night solidified Morris' belief that others in the community are hurting just as much and are just as concerned as she is. About 70 people, from grandparents to pastors to business owners, stood and sat shoulder to shoulder in the Logansport Board of Aldermen meeting room to show that they, too, want to be part of a solution. "That meeting shocked me because help came to the addicts," Morris said the next day. "The important thing is not to back down now." Michael Deutsch also is pumped by the community reaction. The lifelong Logansport resident is disheartened by the decline he's witnessed in his community. "We want drug dealers on the run. We want them to stop. We're not saying that we hope it happens. We're saying it's going to happen." Morris and Lisa Deutsch already have requested to appear on the Aug. 10 agenda of the Logansport Board of Aldermen meeting to solicit its support in projects that can be small steps toward making the community less desirable to drug dealers. Among their suggestions are signs proclaiming "community watch" areas, ensuring streetlights are working in the neighborhoods where darkness hides illegal activity and enforcing curfew and loitering laws. Owners of Seasons Apartments, a low-income complex where many drug-related arrests are made, recently put up surveillance cameras to record activity only to find days later that the cameras had been damaged. Plans were to have the cameras replaced. Morris vows to keep after the apartment complex owners to ensure they're doing their part to help the community turn the tide on drug activity. Expect Morris and her neighbors to be more vocal in their criticism of those who do nothing to report suspicious activity. She admits to being the one who turned in information on one so-called "big" drug dealer. And she won't hesitate to do it again. Logansporter Rick Wing even suggested last week that concerned residents start packing disposable cameras. They're cheap and would provide an easy way to document drug activity that he says he witnesses almost daily. Though residents are cautioned against vigilante action, "it's the squeaky wheel that gets the grease," DeSoto Sheriff Rodney Arbuckle said. "But like I've been saying all along, when the community gets tired of it, we'll be more effective." Perhaps suspected drug dealers already are taking notice. DeSoto sheriff's deputies, Tri-Parish Drug Task Force agents and a state Probation and Parole officer made impromptu visits to Seasons and Lum apartments Friday morning to check on probationers and parolees only to find empty dwellings. "We just shook some bushes to let them know we're looking at them," Arbuckle said. The apartment checks were planned prior to the community meeting Thursday night, but the coincidental timing didn't hurt, Arbuckle said. The sheriff hears complaints that not enough is being done on the law enforcement side, a sentiment with which he and veteran narcotics officers disagree. Sheriff's Lt. Robert Davidson, who worked drug enforcement exclusively until four years ago, readily admits that Logansport has the most drug trafficking among DeSoto communities. But more drug arrests have been and are being made there. It's the behind-the-scenes work that the public is unaware of, he said. Most do not know what it takes to build a case against a suspected drug dealer, many of whom are wise to law enforcement's investigative techniques. Sometimes the cases get bogged down in the overburdened court system. DeSoto alone accounts for 400 to 500 felony arrests a year, and it must share three judges with neighboring Sabine Parish, Assistant District Attorney Richard Johnson said. Admittedly, homicides, sexual offenses and other violent crimes get preference in the nine to 12 weeks of criminal jury trials scheduled throughout the year. While an attempt is made to concentrate prosecution on drug dealers and not those deemed to have legitimate substance abuse problems, there are limited alternatives available, Johnson said. The DeSoto-based drug court, which acts as a diversion program for first-time offenders who are substance abusers, has limited space and can take a year to 18 months to complete. The program itself even suffered a black eye this year when the person overseeing it was arrested for soliciting a controlled drug in return for favorable reporting. Johnson acknowledged the problems that law enforcement has in putting together a drug case for prosecution. It's difficult at times to get undercover officers into the area to make cases. And law enforcement officers have rules to abide by, Arbuckle said. "Drug dealers don't have rules." Added Johnson: "Drug dealers are like viruses. When they evolve, you've got to evolve with them." One of Logansport's largest drug dealers, Marvin Garrett, was arrested two years ago -- after about 10 years of drug dealing -- and is serving decades behind bars. Greg Franks and Billy Roy Dickson are other known Logansport area drug dealers who are incarcerated and out of business. It's the street-corner dealers -- those who make trips to Shreveport or Houston for smaller buys that they divvy up for sale in local neighborhoods -- who are more troublesome, Davidson said. "It's not like you've got a kingpin sitting somewhere in a house. There's just a lot of little dealers coming in and out," he told community members last week. "We're as frustrated as you are, but we're working as fast as we can." Logansport is somewhat unique, though, in that as a state border town, it's the first stop for drugs flowing over the bridge that connects Louisiana and Texas. "Getting across the river is another part of this circle," Arbuckle said. "There's just something about that bridge." He's received a commitment from one of two candidates seeking the sheriff's job in Shelby County, Texas, to assist DeSoto in its drug fight if he's elected. The Rev. Chris Welch, pastor of Word of Faith in Joaquin, Texas, may have been the lone Texan in the crowd at last week's Logansport town meeting. But he pledged to take a leadership role on his side of the river and to join forces with Logansport. His support and that expressed by Logansport pastors is encouraging to Morris. The Rev. Charles Hall, pastor of First Baptist Church in Logansport, offered his sanctuary as a meeting place for the support groups that Morris is committed to seeing organized. Alcoholics Anonymous and Al-Anon meetings once were held in Logansport. The closest locations now are in Mansfield and Center, Texas; distance sometimes provides excuses for Logansport addicts not to attend. Morris wants the meetings open to family members, who often times are suffering silently, she said. "Years ago, there wasn't the moral support. All of these years, I walked around and I knew people knew (about my son). I went to meetings with him. I read books," Morris said. "Parents have to be alert. There's so much that we don't know about this." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin