Pubdate: Sun, 13 Jun 2004 Source: Athens Banner-Herald (GA) Copyright: 2004 Athens Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.onlineathens.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1535 Author: Joe Johnson WITH DRUGS AN EASY SELL, OTHER TYPES OF CRIME FOLLOW As the car slowed to turn from Paris Street onto Henderson Avenue Extension one recent weekday morning, one of a group of young men standing on the corner shouted to the driver, ''Yo! What up?'' After a slight pause, he approached the car and asked, ''What you want? You want some crack?'' The driver declined the offer of cocaine, and after going once around the block he returned to the same corner, prompting the men to begin walking away, muttering, ''You're the police!'' Showing his press badge, the driver explained he was not a cop, just a reporter out on a story about life in Henderson Extension, a pocket of extreme poverty and high crime in west Athens. The area - roughly bounded by West Broad, South Rocksprings, Baxter and Magnolia streets - - is also known as ''Rocksprings'' because dominating the center of the neighborhood is the Rocksprings Homes public apartment complex, off South Rocksprings Street. The young men decided to talk, but despite the earlier offer of crack denied being drug dealers. Before long they were joined by about eight other young men, none of whom was willing to answer questions about drug dealing, but rather chose to rail against those who try to stem such illegal activities. ''The police were just here about 15 minutes ago,'' one young man said. ''They knocked some of them young boys riding their bicycles onto the ground.'' The others began recounting how a group of about nine officers armed with shotguns and pistols jumped out of a van, ordered everyone to the ground and began searching them for drugs. ''You can stand on the sidewalk on Broad Street downtown, but you can't stand on the sidewalk where you live,'' said a 17-year-old, who would only identify himself as a football player for Clarke Central High School who lives at Rocksprings Homes. ''The police think everybody around here sells dope.'' The Athens-Clarke County Police Department acknowledges that Henderson Extension has a serious enough crime problem to warrant ongoing drug investigations and the planned opening next year of a neighborhood substation. In addition to the increased police presence a substation will bring, and because the neighborhood suffers from other such problems as poor housing and joblessness, Henderson Extension has become the focus of a multi-agency revitalization effort, involving grassroots and church organizations as well as public agencies to provide career counseling, economic development and affordable housing. While not suspicious of everybody, in spite of the young man's assertion, Athens-Clarke police regularly target Henderson Extension for drug raids and prostitution sweeps, and the easy availability of illegal drugs in the area brings with it other sorts of crimes as well. For example, as a reward for her son earning his graduate equivalency diploma last year, Alean Sims bought him a shiny blue 1987 Monte Carlo with sporty wire-rim tires. Three days later, 18-year-old Justin Sims drove his car to the nearby Rocksprings Homes public housing complex, where he had an appointment with a girl living there to show up so that she could braid his hair. While waiting for the girl to show up, a group of young thugs pulled Sims from his car, beat him and stole his new car. Police later recovered the Monte Carlo - minus its compact disc player - - and the young man spent the next several hours in the hospital being treated for his injuries. ''I told him to stay away from Rocksprings, but he still goes there to get his hair braided,'' Alean Sims said. Other examples abound of how dangerous Henderson Extension can be. So far this year there have been dozens of incidents, including one involving a Northcrest Drive man who told Athens-Clarke police he was walking in the vicinity of West Hancock Avenue and Evans Street when mugged by three young males who beat him and stole his wallet. That same month, a man selling shoes from his van at the intersection of Paris Street and Henderson Avenue Extension was beaten and robbed of 12 pairs of shoes, police said. A few months earlier a man suffered a fractured skull when set upon a group of six men who attacked him with a garbage can and stole his wallet. And just a few weeks ago, Antonio Hitchcock, a 29-year-old wire cable maker, was driving along South Rocksprings Street at Baxter Street, when he heard a gunshot and felt his truck take an impact. He drove to a nearby restaurant on Baxter Street, where he inspected his vehicle and found a bullet hole in the passenger door. Police later retrieved a bullet from the floorboard. ''I don't know if it was intended for me or not,'' Hitchcock told police. ''I don't mess with anyone in that area.'' Not every crime in the area involves violence, but even petty crimes create a sense of fear, insecurity and a general decline in the quality of life. For example, early on the morning of May 19, Dearing Street resident Farley Richmond was awakened by his barking dog. When he went to see why the dog was agitated, Richmond saw a man run through his backyard and hop a fence into his neighbor's yard, and found that a screen window had been pried open. When officers arrived, they found a 25-year-old Athens man in the neighbor's house, and that the residence had been ransacked. When later interviewed about the incident, Richmond said, ''Surprisingly enough, I feel safe but remain vigilant.'' A University of Georgia drama and theater professor, Richmond moved into the Henderson Extension area in 1997, a decision he and his wife made because of the area's diversity. ''We recognized this was a very mixed neighborhood, from historic homes on the street we live to condos, to student housing, and then the public housing project down the street,'' he said. ''It didn't strike us at the time there would be any kinds of problems here.'' That same year Richmond moved in, 17-year-old Clarke Central High School basketball player Ricardo ''Rico'' Williams was slain in a case of mistaken identity. He was sitting in a car on Henderson Avenue Extension one April evening when shot in the head by a young man seeking vengeance against another who had implicated him in a previous homicide. Williams' murder marked the third time within a year a young person was killed violently in the Henderson Extension area. Despite the high rate of crime, Richmond said he planned to stay put. ''We're not moving, because we like diversity and would not want to lose the essential character of that,'' he said. ''I think the crime element has been kind of a continuous thing that has happened in the neighborhood, but we are specifically security conscious,'' with burglar alarm system, outdoor lighting, and a dog. Among crimes committed against his neighbors, Richmond rattled off a list of incidents: ''One of our neighbor's windows was broken and her purse was stolen; someone came in two houses down from us and stole Christmas presents, a football player was roughed up on Pope Street by a couple of guys who stopped in a truck and stole his wallet, and someone else's car window was jimmied open.'' Citing other attempted break-ins, panhandling and homeless people found sleeping in neighbors' yards, Richmond was resigned to having to live a guarded lifestyle. ''Other than having Guardian Angels walking the streets 24 hours, I can't think how much farther one can go beyond continuing to be vigilant and alert,'' he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin