Pubdate: Sat, 23 Sep 2006 Source: Mohave Valley Daily News (AZ) Copyright: 2006 Mohave Valley News Contact: http://www.mohavedailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3625 Author: Jim Seckler FORMER METH USERS SPREAD WORD OF RECOVERY KINGMAN - Two Missouri authors and former drug dealers are spreading the word of the horrors of methamphetamine. Steve Box and Bill McLemore were in Kingman last week on a tour visiting 17 jails and prisons - including the Mohave County Jail, the juvenile facility and the newly built state prison off Interstate 40 southwest of Kingman. Box and McLemore, former drug dealers and meth users, spoke with prisoners on the dangers of meth. The authors also spoke to several dozen people, many former drug users, at a rally in Centennial Park in Kingman. With local law enforcement saying more than 70 percent of all crime in the county is meth-related, Box and McLemore relate their experiences with the drug from the other side of the law. Once arrested and charged with attempted murder and housed in the Clark County jail, Box now visits jails and prisoners spreading the word of faith and horrors of meth. Box, 40, said he lost everything he owned, his house, his job, and his possessions in his seven years hooked meth. Starting with marijuana and cocaine at 14, Box graduated to meth when he was 25. Clean now for seven years, Box wrote three books on his experiences on and his nearly two-year struggle to get off meth. "How do you get off meth?" he asked. "You learn to hate it." Box said users fall into a sick world of child molestation, child abuse and neglect. He also spoke of babies being nailed to walls in meth homes. McLemore, 48, started smoking marijuana at 13 years old and has been using meth for 30 years until he quit four years ago. A drug dealer in prison for more than five years, he even managed to escape twice from a Kansas prison. "Meth is the weapon of mass destruction in this country," McLemore said. McLemore calls meth a medical nightmare with the devastating destruction on one's body and teeth. McLemore also said doctors, attorneys, even judges find themselves hooked on the drug ensnaring addicts from 9 to 70 years old. "This problem is not going away," he said. "The change has to happen within them," he said, pointing to his heart. McLemore said an alarming number of grandparents are raising millions of children, whose parents are hooked on meth. "It's the number one problem in law enforcement," McLemore said. McLemore met Box at a speaking engagement four years ago and started a ministry together. The pair moved to a cabin the mountains of Missouri to write their books together. Now they travel together wherever they are needed, talking to inmates and reformed drug users relating their experiences in and out of prison and hooked on meth. Many times they hand out their faith-based books to inmates. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine