Pubdate: Fri, 27 May 2005 Source: Charleston Daily Mail (WV) Copyright: 2005 Charleston Daily Mail Contact: http://www.dailymail.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/76 Author: Dave Peyton Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) CITY COUNCILS MUST DEAL WITH CRIME Sunday suits and murder scenes Brandi Jacobs-Jones is the youngest and one of the newest members of Huntington City Council. She ran unopposed in her district last November. She lives in the very heart of the city's drug-dealing district, only a few blocks from where four teenagers were gunned down Sunday morning. Last week, she looked out her window and saw young men and women aimlessly walking her street. Some of them were prostitutes, she says. Some of them were dealing drugs. Some of them -- the ones who "look like zombies" -- were drug users. Earlier this week, all that activity had come to a halt, at least for the time being. The death of the four young people at a house on Charleston Avenue brought extra patrols from Huntington City Police, State Police and the Cabell County Sheriff's Office to her neighborhood. For the moment, she said, it is the kind of street she and most of her neighbors hoped it would always be -- quiet and free of drug deals. "If it were like this for the next six months, really aggressive patrolling, I think it would make a difference. Of course I'm known in the community as a Pollyanna," she said. As an outreach worker for the Ebenezer Medical Clinic in Huntington, a free medical clinic for the poor and medically underserved, she works in the area where she lives and where the shootings occurred. She hears things on the street that lead her to believe what the Huntington police believe: The four cold-blooded murders were somehow drug-related. Jacobs-Jones and the police believe three of the four were in the wrong place at the wrong time. The target was Donte Ward, who lived in the Charleston Avenue house. All four were shot in the front yard about 4:30 a.m. Sunday. "I arrived there about 7:30 a.m. (Sunday). While I was there, I noticed two young boys, nine or 10. Their mothers had dressed them in their Sunday suits. They were ready to go to church and they had come out to see what was happening. They were taking it all in. "I thought to myself, 'How sad they had to see this.' I can't imagine what kind of impression it had on them," Jacobs-Jones said. Like the police, Jacobs-Jones believes drug dealers from the Detroit area were the shooters. She believes they left town soon after the murders. But that still left more -- perhaps many more -- Detroit crack dealers in town. Detroit is the source of most of the crack cocaine in Huntington, according to police. They supply an unknown number of crack addicts in Huntington and probably Charleston. It's said that crack is sold at a premium in Huntington. It's much more expensive here than in Detroit. That's the reason for the insidious "Detroit connection." That connection directly and indirectly caused the execution-style deaths of the four teenagers. Jacobs-Jones believes -- or at least she hopes -- it was a one-of-a-kind tragedy that will never happen again. Jacobs-Jones is the daughter of Tom Jacobs, who used to work as a TV newsman for WSAZ in Huntington. She has lived a lot of places, but she came to Huntington to attend Marshall University, where she was the first female and the first African-American to become student body president. After graduation, she settled in Huntington "to make a difference. I really love my neighbors and there's such a sense of community here, like no other place I have ever lived." When she looked out her front window before the crackdown, she saw "young men and women so beaten down, they didn't believe they had any opportunities or any future. "When young people achieve some success, they leave here. All that's left are these youngsters with no hope. They see the dealers making fast easy money and they fall into the trap. Somehow we have to give them hope." Sometimes, she says, a few words can help enormously. "I have a friend who recently got in trouble and went to jail. When I saw him I told him that he is special. 'That's the first time anyone ever told me that,' he said. Maybe if someone had told him that earlier and had believed in him, he wouldn't have gotten into trouble." Jacobs-Jones believes the drug problem is the most serious problem in Huntington, but doesn't believe all members of council agree with her. "And I think it might be even more serious in Charleston,' she said. What to do about it? The solution, she said, must involve everyone -- the police, families, the men and women on the street who really want to bring drug-dealing to an end, and the people who work with kids to give them hope, a sense of belonging and "jobs that matter." The member of council has taken it upon herself to study what other cities are doing to combat the crack cocaine epidemic. She says she will collect ideas and offer them to the community, which she hopes will develop an action plan. It's better, she says, than sitting quietly in her council seat, casting "yea" and "nay" votes that may or may not matter and worrying about uncut weeds on vacant lots, a seemingly perennial topic at the meetings. Winter will take care of the weeds, but not the city's horrendous drug problem. People, not a simple change of seasons, must solve the problems that most likely caused Sunday morning's murders. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom