Pubdate: Wed, 11 Apr 2007 Source: Texarkana Gazette (TX) Copyright: 2007 Texarkana Gazette Contact: http://www.texarkanagazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/976 Author: Lon Dunn, Texarkana Gazette Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) SHERIFF SPEAKS FROM PERSONAL EXPERIENCE AT METH MEETINGS Bowie County Sheriff James Prince has a unique perspective when it comes to dealing with methamphetamine users and their families. Three and a half years ago, he had his own 31-year-old son arrested on drug charges. ‘Its a tough thing to put your kid in jail, but a lot of people are doing it. The alternative is a whole lot worse. I told my son I would rather see him in jail than in a casket' Prince said. Prince spoke Tuesday night in Redwater, Texas, at the first town hall meeting held by the Bowie County Sheriffs Office and the East Texas Council on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse. He said he caught a plane to Georgia when he received a phone call saying his son might be doing drugs. Once he arrived, his son who just months before had called his dad every two weeks dodged him for three days. When Prince did finally see his son, he barely recognized him. ‘All of his life hes been told he looks like Tom Cruise. He took care of himself. He was preppy' Prince said. The son he saw that day in Georgia had oily hair and unkept fingernails. He was thin and paranoid. ‘He didnt look like Tom Cruise that day' Prince said. Afraid that his son would continue to decline, Prince worked with undercover investigators in Georgia to have him arrested. ‘I applied tough love' he said. Prince, who flew to Georgia to pick his son up after he was released from prison a few weeks ago, hopes it has worked. ‘My boy told me Daddy, I would not have gotten off it if you had not done what you did' Prince said. However, he remains concerned about relapses because it is so common among meth users. ‘I hope and pray he stays off it' the sheriff said. Prince said parents of meth users should not be ashamed if their sons or daughters are on drugs. ‘You have not done anything wrong' he said. He said often good people fall in with the wrong people and make dangerous mistakes. ‘I am not happy with the mistake (my son) made in life but I still love him' he said. The purpose of the town hall meetings is to educate parents and other relatives about the symptoms of meth use and some of the other signs associated with it. Meth Watch, a national awareness program, has been implemented in a number of other states and is now starting in Texas. DeAnna OMalley, education specialist for the East Texas Council on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse, said Meth Watch has been established as part of Senate Bill 66 with the intention of informing retailers of the problems associated with meth. Signs and brochures will be placed in retail stores near the merchandise that could be purchased for drug manufacturing or use. A grant from Texas Gov. Rick Perrys office is paying for the signs, brochures and other materials. State law already requires any store that carries pseudoephedrine-based products to place those products behind sales counters or in locked cabinets. Another town hall meeting will be held at 6:30 tonight at Texas High School. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath