Pubdate: Tue, 12 Jul 2005 Source: Clarion-Ledger, The (MS) Copyright: 2005 The Clarion-Ledger Contact: http://www.clarionledger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/805 Author: Erin Puryear NEW MBN CHIEF DRIVEN Gov. Haley Barbour named Marshall Fisher head of the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics in June. Fisher has worked in law enforcement for 28 years, first in theTyler, Texas, police department before moving to the DEA. Shortly after busting several men in San Antonio for cooking crack cocaine on a kitchen stove, Marshall Fisher sat holding a 2-year-old boy in diapers on his lap. Tears rolled down the toddler's cheeks as he watched drug-enforcement officers put handcuffs on his father and uncle. "Those things strengthen my resolve that this job is important," Fisher said. Then, the Brandon resident was an agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration. He now sits as the director of the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics. Fisher's 28-year career in law enforcement began at a police department in Tyler, Texas. His first DEA post was in San Antonio. In 2003, he came to Rankin County to head state DEA operations. Gov. Haley Barbour appointed Fisher to the new post June 3. He now leads the state's primary drug-enforcement agency, which confiscates drugs and other contraband and arrests suspected drug violators for prosecution on state, federal and local levels. The 53-year-old Louisiana native said he's learned a few things from his years as in law enforcement. "I'm probably more alert than your average person when they're coming out of Brookshire's going to their car with a sack of groceries," Fisher said. In his career, Fisher walked through a normal home and into a basement-turned-methamphetamine lab. He's seen an office of DEA agents panicked at the kidnapping, torture and murder of one of their co-workers. He's walked into a domestic dispute between two intoxicated adults with a vodka-soaked infant wailing at their feet. "It has absolutely changed the way I look at things," he said. "It's made me more aware of the fact that there are things that are out of people's control." According to Fisher, narcotics are the source of mostof the world's crime-driven pain and suffering. "I do think a great percentage of crime in this country can be traced back, in some way, shape, form or function, to substance abuse," he said. It is this thought that fuels Fisher's belief in his job. His main function - his only function - is to get drugs and drug dealers off the streets, he said. "We're a single-mission agency," he said with a smile. "Like Colonel Sanders - we do chicken, and that's it." Cocaine is the biggest threat in the state today, he said, but meth is creeping up and may be on top tomorrow. Rankin County Sheriff Ronnie Pennington worked with Fisher often during Fisher's time at the DEA. He said his office consults with the MBN on special cases. "(Fisher's) a good man to work with," he said. "They couldn't have picked a better man." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin