Pubdate: Thu, 08 Mar 2007 Source: Summerland Review (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Summerland Review Contact: http://www.summerlandreview.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1143 Author: John Arendt Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) STUDENTS HEAR ANTI-DRUG MESSAGE A former drug user and dealer spoke to Summerland students last week about making positive choices and rejecting drug use On Thursday morning, Serge LeClerc, director of Teen Challenge Saskatchewan, spoke at Summerland Secondary School and Summerland Middle School about his past. He became a street kid when he was 12 years old and started using drugs at 15. Later, he ran a criminal gang with up to 70 members. In the 1960s, he began selling drugs and in 1984 was arrested and imprisoned after running a $40 million drug operation. "I didn't come here to brag about my past," he says. "I was a very evil man. I destroyed many people's lives." He spent more than 21 years in jail, the result of bad choices he made starting when he was young. When he was caught breaking into houses as a child in Toronto, he was sent to St. John's Training School where he was routinely beaten by the teachers and abused by students. Eventually, he became involved in more and more criminal activity. "Kids don't realize the choices they make today have an impact for them and those around them," he says. "The secret of life is about your choices." He urges students to reject drug use, including marijuana use, which he says can lead to harder drugs. "I've never met anyone who was an addict who didn't start with marijuana," he says. He adds that when he was using drugs, it was to numb the pain of abuses he had experienced and was experiencing. "You don't do drugs to feel good," he says, "you do drugs not to feel bad." LeClerc was brought to schools in Summerland and the region by South Okanagan Similkameen Crime Stoppers. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom