Pubdate: Thu, 03 Nov 2005 Source: Lufkin Daily News (TX) Copyright: 2005 Cox Texas Newspapers, L.P. - The Lufkin Daily News Contact: http://www.lufkindailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3616 Author: Ashley Cook OFFICIALS SEARCH FOR WAYS TO KEEP DRUG ABUSE FROM HURTING FAMILY MEMBERS How does a community change the culture of addiction ravaging its families and children? That question is on many minds in the wake of the Candice Alexander murder case closure Tuesday. It was that day that Johnny and Rebecca Lee, 54 and 37, guilty of murdering their 15-year-old daughter by methamphetamine overdose, left the courtroom to begin serving matching life sentences. The pair had left Alexander's lifeless body on their living room floor for hours as they cleaned up remnants of a drug lab before calling 911. Her sisters, then 13 and 16, both step- and biological parents and a host of family and friends were so deeply involved in the violent, physically and sexually-abusive drug world that they could not, or would not, save her. She'd wanted something different, to escape the life that trapped her. But she never made it, Angelina County District Attorney Clyde Herrington said, pausing Tuesday evening after the trial to reflect on the case. Alexander's case had been among the hardest in his 20-plus years in office, he said. And it had made him take stock. What went wrong? Every child in society ought to have a chance, he said. "Candice wanted a better life, and a different life. She was really special," Herrington said, tears choking his words. A teacher who'd had Candice as a student described the girl as bright and capable, he said. Even the few times she was able to attend, she'd caught up quickly, he said, evidence of a potential never realized. Her case joins the rising number of violent methamphetamine-related crimes in Angelina County, Herrington said. In October 2004, Herrington worked the Bailey Heald capital murder case. In that case, baby-sitter Felicia Pelzel was sleeping off a methamphetamine jag when she suffocated 2 1/2-year-old Bailey Heald. Pelzel is now serving a 57-year prison sentence. The court system was clogged with cases, Herrington said. And drug treatment programs, suffering massive funding cuts over the last few years, were not working. "What we're doing is not effective," Herrington said. New programs like Drug Court, an intensive anti drug-addiction course organized by state District Judge Paul White, were good, Herrington said. But there is room for much more, he said. Education is the key, reaching kids young enough before they start trying drugs, Herrington said. "And not just schools. Churches, parents, community organizations - everybody," Herrington said. Phyllis Grandgeorge, executive director of the Deep East Texas Alcohol and Drug Abuse Council, agreed. Grandgeorge Wednesday said she was worried the Alexander case would prejudice the community against methamphetamine users. There was a whole lot more going on in the Lee family besides drug abuse, she said. While drugs did play a major role in the case, many addicts - drug and alcohol abusers alike - are good, functioning members of the community, holding jobs while fighting their addiction, she said. A consequence of methamphetamine use in particular is both the child neglect and sexual perversion seen in the Lee case, Grandgeorge said. The drug hyper-stimulates the pleasure-sensing areas of the brain, damaging and impairing those connections. Users will abandon everything important to them to get the drug, to feel the high. Angelina County is seeing its second and third generations of methamphetamine addicts, often within the same families. "Grandpa was arrested for cooking 20 years ago. He taught it to his son, who passed it on to grandson," Grandgeorge said. Entire families are sucked into methamphetamine addiction, different from the ravaging effects of alcoholism and cocaine abuse on families, she said. Angelina County Sheriff's Sgt. Dawn Stripling has seen the generational effect of methamphetamine firsthand. Frustrated by the increasing abuse she witnesses in families wracked by drug crime, she has hopes the Lee's double life sentences will have an impact on the drug community. "I hope this sends a pretty strong message to all our methamphetamine users, for taking their children into these environments," Stripling said. If anything positive can be taken away from the Alexander case, it should be a lesson in cooperation between law enforcement agencies, according to Herrington and Stripling. Suggestions of the sheriff's office dropping the ball early on in the case were unfounded, Herrington said firmly, crediting Stripling and Sheriff Kent Henson for continuing to work the case and provide information in cooperation with federal, state and local agencies. The FBI, U.S. Attorney's Office, Texas Rangers, Sheriff's deputies and Lufkin police detectives all worked the case. Lufkin Police Sgt. David Campbell, who took the lead in the case, made the difference, Herrington said. He thanked Lufkin Police Chief Larry Brazil for allowing Campbell to continue his extensive involvement on the case. "What I hope we will foster is a spirit of cooperation between agencies," Herrington said. "We want to get the job done, and these are some great folks." Bringing the Lees to justice was worth the long hours, and learning to work together, Stripling said. "I see in the future a good working relationship for us to solve major crimes that are interrelated between the city and county, including Huntington, Hudson and Zavalla," Stripling said. "It gave us contacts all around the board." There is still a lot of work to do, for all agencies fighting methamphetamine. Stripling had recently come across a 14-year-old methamphetamine addict. "She'd been using since she was 11," Stripling said. Fighting to get someone out of their drug-dependent environment and over the first months of recovery is a major part of the battle, Grandgeorge said. Addicts or family members needing help can contact ADAC for confidential assistance at 936-634-5753, or toll-free at 1-800-445-8562. Anyone suspecting a child is being abused can call the Child Protective Services hotline at 1-800-252-5400 or a local law enforcement agency. Calls can be confidential. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman