Pubdate: Sun, 05 Sep 2004 Source: Decatur Daily (AL) Copyright: 2004 The Decatur Daily Contact: http://www.decaturdaily.com/decaturdaily/index.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/696 Author: Clyde L. Stancil Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) AFTER SON'S OVERDOSE, MOTHER FIGHTS AGAINST DRUGS CADDO -- Among the photographs that Mechell Dover carries on her camera phone is one that she would continue to see even if she deleted it and closed her eyes. It shows her 16-year-old son, Tom Oliver, lying in a hospital bed with wires stuck to his chest so medical workers can monitor his vital signs. There is a black blob on the photo that looks like someone used the blotting feature in a photo editing software package to hide his mouth. In reality, it is the charcoal that physicians forced him to ingest so that it would absorb the drugs he took Aug. 23 in the parking lot at East Lawrence High School, said Dover. He is out of the hospital, but Dover said that there is a possibility that Tom could have organ failure. The photograph is in sharp contrast to another that Dover carries in her digital photo album. It shows a smiling, happier Tom and is reminiscent of how he looked when he left home that morning. It was the day that she said East Lawrence Principal Tommy Whitlow called her to say that her son had failed a sobriety test. Whitlow was out of the office and could not be reached for comment. Superintendent Dexter Rutherford said that he could not comment because of the associated disciplinary hearing that would take place in two weeks. But he said that if there is any kind of illegal activity at the school, the system will try to curtail it. "I was at East Lawrence (Thursday), and it's a well-disciplined environment and a well-operated school," he said. "It appears to be a safe learning environment, and I certainly wouldn't want to paint a negative picture. There are certainly no widespread issues there that I'm aware of." Rutherford said, however, that he wouldn't be so naive as to say that the accusations that Dover is making could not happen. Overdose Dover said that her son told Whitlow that he was having a reaction to a prescription painkiller and another prescription drug that he was taking for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. As part of his treatment program at Bradford Health Services, Dover said, her son had to be honest about the drugs he ingested. He later confessed that he had ingested Xanax that he purchased from another student in the school's parking lot. Dover alleges that the student sold it to her son out of his sport utility vehicle. Drugs in His System Toxicology tests showed that he ingested three or four of what Dover said are Xanax bars and three Adderall ZR, a time release medicine for his ADHD condition. Dover said her son took the medicine to hide it from the Drug Abuse Resistance Education officer who searched him at school. She dispenses the Adderall to him one pill at a time, but she said that Tom stole the extra pills from her. "He (also) purchased them from the same boy at a convenience store where the boy works," Dover said. "This boy wasn't the only boy. My son was involved in the trading of drugs. He was trading prescription drugs for other drugs with boys at school. On the third day of school, six boys had skipped with the boy who sold him the drugs. There was drinking and smoking and doing prescription pills." That day, Dover said, the six students stopped at someone's house and bought eight Lortab from a 14-year-old girl. Other in Rehab Dover said that she talked to the mother of the boy who sold her son the drugs and that the mother claims the teen also is in drug rehabilitation. Tom is facing expulsion from school. "I'm not fighting it because he was wrong," Dover said. The outcome of the expulsion is not a great concern for Dover because she doesn't plan to send her son back to school anytime soon. "He's in Bradford now and he has to go to a halfway house because 14 days is not enough to dry out," she said. "He has to learn new learned behavior -- how to deal with drug dealers, how to say 'no.' He will do school there (in long-term treatment). "I understand that education is important, but I want to keep him alive. "Kids can't get educated when they're passing drugs around school." Dover also said that Whitlow said he can't do anything until he catches the student with drugs. "Why would my kid lie?" she asked. "He's lying there half dead. Other children have told me the same thing. When you have two and three people backing it up, what else do you need? The coffin?" Dover wants the school's parents to form a group, Parents Against Drug Dealers, and begin to monitor the school's parking lots and hallways. "Teachers and principals can't be everywhere," she said. "One DARE officer can't cut it when you have 600 students. If we don't start doing something, our kids are going to start dying." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake