Pubdate: Mon, 13 Nov 2006 Source: Daytona Beach News-Journal (FL) Copyright: 2006 News-Journal Corporation Contact: http://www.news-journalonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/700 Note: gives priority to local writers Author: Lyda Longa, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) 'CHASING THE DRAGON' ON N. RIDGEWOOD DAYTONA BEACH -- Driving down North Ridgewood Avenue to take her 2-year-old daughter to day care, Nerdy Francois relives her past as a crack addict, a horrifying glimpse of another life. Inside the car, however, she has only to turn and gaze into her daughter's brown eyes to find hope or look to the key chain dangling from her ignition, a reminder from her drug program that she's been clean for nearly three years. "I was there at one time," she said, "I see a lot of pain and misery that I don't want." Stories like Francois' do not shock Jesse Godfrey, the Daytona Beach police lieutenant who oversees the department's narcotics unit. "Crack cocaine is called chasing the dragon," said Godfrey, who has seen his share of tragedy because he has worked in the city's drug division for more than a decade. "You get a euphoric high the first time you try it, then you spend the rest of your life trying to get it again, and you can't." Crack is the scourge along North Ridgewood and many of its side streets, police say. The North Street area, which Godfrey called the "the most notable" for sales and use of the drug, is a sometimes bustling thoroughfare where addicts and dealers converge, then scatter like cockroaches under a harsh light when police are near. Here, the drug rules. And it has the prostitutes, the homeless, the day laborers and the outsiders who know where to go to score a rock in its grip. Without a doubt, it's the felony drug of choice, Godfrey says, the one narcotic that's still cheap to get and even tougher to shake. "A $20 rock is still a $20 rock," Godfrey says. "We have women out here who will sell their body for it." What makes it even harder for police is that Daytona Beach has bred a handful of families who have made it their business to pass on the crack-selling trade to their children. Some of these clans live near North Ridgewood, Godfrey says. "I've arrested the fathers and mothers, and now I'm arresting the children of some of these people for dealing," Godfrey said. "We can't solve the problem until we break the cycle of crime in these families, and that's going to take time." Godfrey said the demographics of the city have almost made it easy for crack to flourish. Because almost 50 percent of the residential parcels in Daytona Beach are rentals, some of the properties are owned by absentee landlords who have leased apartments and single-family homes to a less than law-abiding element. Police continue to have undercover stings and surveillance operations designed to nab crack dealers and users, but it takes several felony crack cocaine-possession convictions before someone is sent to prison. The one bright spot, Godfrey says, is that in a city of roughly 65,000 people, less than 1 percent of the population is linked to crack cocaine either through addiction or as dealers. Dr. Doug Davies, medical director of Stewart-Marchman Center for Chemical Independence in Daytona Beach, said crack is highly addictive because once smoked it "goes straight to the brain." "It blasts tight into your brain and acts as a central nervous system stimulant," Davies said. "It makes you good and crazy -- they call it geekin' and peakin' " Francois remembers the effects of the drug well: "It's almost like having an orgasm. That kind of rush. It's also different because after you don't have anymore, you're just chasing that high." Chasing the high is the goal and coming off the drug is sheer hell. "It messes with the brain and can cause seizures and tremors," Dr. Davies said. "Crack addicts become paranoid. They will hide inside and look out curtains because they think they're being watched. "It's a tough one to walk away from," Davies said. So far, Francois has. Now 30, she is going to school at Daytona Beach Community College, working two jobs and taking care of her three daughters -- ages 2, 4 and 6 -- in a home she shares with her boyfriend in Holly Hill. It's a life she could never have imagined when she was living in her fiance's brother's garage in Miami. Back then she spent money set aside for milk and diapers to get a rock. A chance meeting with her sister in a Daytona Beach supermarket made Francois -- nearly eight months pregnant at the time -- enter a treatment program with Stewart-Marchman. Her sister called the state abuse hot line, and child welfare officials threatened to take her children. Having grown up in foster care, she didn't want the same life for her girls. "I stopped enjoying getting high a long time ago," she said. "I looked all skin and bones. And I wanted to give my kids a chance." Francois still has stress in her life. The kids crawl on top of her vying for her attention as she tries to do the laundry or make lunch. She wakes up at 5 a.m. daily to go to work. On the nights she attends school, she gets home late, leaving little time to think about getting high, she said. "When I drive down Ridgewood," she said, "I can see that I don't ever want to be there again, so I keep driving." [Sidebar] Cocaine Facts Arrests: Possession of cocaine 2004: 523 2005: 575 Sale of cocaine 2004: 101 2005: 112 ER Treatments: Patients with a cocaine abuse or dependency-related diagnosis are a fraction of total treatments in the Emergency Department at Halifax Medical Center in Daytona Beach. But they are up by almost 200 in the most recent tracking period, Oct. 1, 2005, to Sept. 30, 2006: 2002-03: 531 2003-04: 701 2004-05: 645 2005-06: 717 Did You Know Pure cocaine was first used in the 1880s as a local anesthetic in eye, nose and throat surgeries because of its ability to constrict blood vessels, limiting bleeding. Safer drugs made cocaine medically obsolete. Today crack and its hybrids are known by a street language all its own. BINGERS: Crack addicts GEEKER: Crack user JELLY BEANS, ROOSTER, TORNADO: Crack MOONROCK: Crack mixed with heroin OOLIES: Marijuana laced with crack WICKY STICK: PCP, marijuana and crack SOURCE: The Office of National Drug Control Policy - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman