Pubdate: Sun, 26 Aug 2007 Source: News-Gazette, The (Champaign, IL) Copyright: 2007 The News-Gazette Contact: http://www.news-gazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1272 Author: Noelle McGee Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) DEMONSTRATORS GATHER TO MARCH AGAINST DRUGS DANVILLE - For several weeks, Betsy Morgenroth went back and forth over whether she would participate in Saturday's communitywide march against drugs. By the night before, the Hoopeston woman knew what she had to do. "I needed to be here for him," said Morgenroth, whose 18-year-old son, John Travis Morgenroth, died from an overdose of Xanax, Valium and morphine on June 13. "I'd like for something good to come out of his death. I haven't figured out yet what that's going to be. You just feel like you have to do something." About 150 people - most wearing red shirts, symbolizing the blood of Jesus Christ - marched behind an ambulance and a white hearse along a route from Danville High School to Lincoln Park. Some sang and carried signs that said "Fight for the family" and "Nobody is judging you." When they got to the park's performance center, six men carried a silver casket to the stage. Pastor Thomas Miller, the event's organizer, said the casket represented where drugs will eventually take people who use or sell them. "We don't want anybody else in Danville to die from drugs," said Miller, of the New Life Church of Faith in Danville. "We're coming out from behind our stained-glass windows. We're coming out from behind our corporate desks ... into the streets to say, 'We're going to take our city back by standing together ... Today, this is the end of it.'" Mayor Scott Eisenhauer asked residents to step up and say, "Not in my backyard." "When you see it, report it," said Eisenhauer, who also urged people to get help for themselves or others who need it. "There is a way to turn your life around. There are many agencies ... and churches that can help. We need to do a better job of sharing that." Some who marched or showed up later at the park talked about the effect drugs and alcohol have had on the community, even their lives. They shared stories of how addiction has led to domestic abuse, broken families, lost jobs, poverty, sickness and hopelessness. It has also led to crime and a perception that the neighborhoods aren't safe. "I think the drugs are getting really bad in Danville," said Kawana Moore, who went with her daughters, Christina Moore, 9, and Krystal Love, 8. They live on Grace Street, not far from where three Danville residents - Rodney Pepper, 30, Ta'Breyon McCullough, 21, and Madisen Leverenz, 19 - were gunned down in the 1700 block of Main Street in March. "I'm afraid to let my kids go outside." For Morgenroth and her family, her son's drug addiction led to the "ultimate" heartbreak. She said her son was a good student and gifted athlete and had a loving family, but he started smoking marijuana with friends at 15. "That was the door," Morgenroth said, adding her son got hooked on prescription drugs at 17. "The availability is unbelievable. They could get anything they wanted." She said she learned her son's dealer in Hoopeston got his supply from a dealer in Danville. "We talked to him so many times and tried to get him help," she said, adding her son was in drug counseling when he died. "Even though you're scared of what could happen ... you think lot of kids go through it, and they make it through. You don't think it will happen to you." Judy Tinsley said people who struggle with addictions can break them with help - and she's proof. Tinsley used to use and sell drugs in the 1970s. "I was drawn into it through a boyfriend who sold cocaine and heroin," the longtime Danville resident said. "I knew they were evil, but I didn't know how to stop." Tinsley was eventually imprisoned for selling cocaine. But she didn't stop until two men with guns broke into her and her boyfriend's house, demanding money the boyfriend owed them. "They kept threatening to kill us," she said. "I prayed to the Lord, 'Lord, if you get me out of this, I will turn my life over to you.' I kept my word. It's still a struggle sometimes, but I will never live that lifestyle again." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake