Pubdate: Wed, 06 Apr 2005 Source: Greensboro News & Record (NC) Copyright: 2005 Greensboro News & Record, Inc. Contact: http://www.news-record.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/173 Author: John Vandiver, staff writer POLICE GIVE DRUG SUSPECTS 2ND CHANCE HIGH POINT -- Darius Johnson, surrounded by eight others who police say sold drugs on the streets of the Daniel Brooks neighborhood, leaned forward in his seat as he heard the message. "Tonight is the decision point in your lives, a big decision point. We can take you at any time," police Chief Jim Fealy told the group. On Tuesday, the group of nine accused dealers was called to police headquarters for an intervention-style meeting that was eight months in the making. It concluded months of undercover work by High Point police, in which cases ready for prosecution were built against Johnson and the others. But instead of being arrested, members of the group were given a second chance to find a job and get out of the drug business. "Daniel Brooks is off limits for drugs. Anyone have any questions about that?" asked Rob Lang, assistant U.S. attorney for the Middle District of North Carolina. "We can pick you up tonight if you're back out on the corner." As the 23-year-old Johnson heard the message, he said to himself: "I got a family. I can't be doing this." For police, offering the group a second chance is part of a larger strategy that involves building closer ties with the rest of Daniel Brooks' residents, whom officers hope will become more active in reporting crime. During the meeting, the group of accused dealers heard from family members, civic activists and church leaders who said they were tired of having drugs in the neighborhood and all the violence that comes with it. "Why not change sides? Take another perspective on life," said the Rev. Calvin Shaw of Mount Zion Baptist Church, a congregation that serves Daniel Brooks. In Daniel Brooks, a public housing community near High Point University, police spent hundreds of hours researching the neighborhood's drug culture. The methodical approach, which involves undercover surveillance stings, is a new way of confronting street-level drug crimes. Traditionally, neighborhood sweeps were the common police tactic. But such tactics sometimes work against police by fostering neighborhood resentment against law enforcement, Fealy said. The decision to crack down on drug dealing in Daniel Brooks began shortly after a meeting in August when police reviewed a crime map of the city, which revealed that Daniel Brooks had emerged as High Point's new hot spot for crime. About a year earlier, the trouble spot was the West End area. But a police crackdown on dealers there -- similar to what's being done in Daniel Brooks -- galvanized the West End community, making it a difficult place for dealers to do business, police said. Police hope to equal that success in Daniel Brooks. Levander Perkins -- Johnson's father -- couldn't believe it when police told him his son wasn't going to face prosecution. "I actually think they're blessed. The average man wouldn't get a second chance like this," he said. Johnson said the next step for him is finding a job. "Anything I can do, I'll do it," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin