Pubdate: Fri, 3 Jul 2009 Source: Daily Advance, The (Elizabeth City, NC) Copyright: 2009 Cox Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.dailyadvance.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1700 Author: Diana Mazzella, Staff Writer Note: MAP archives articles exactly as published, except that our editors may redact the names and addresses of accused persons who have not been convicted of a crime, if those named are not otherwise public figures or officials. DRUG SUSPECT: ARREST HAS REPERCUSSIONS Woman Says She, Her Son Are Innocent [redacted] isn't sure what she's going to do next. The mother of three recently lost her job and faces eviction from her rental home in Elizabeth City this month. If that wasn't enough, [redacted]'s son, [redacted] is facing felony drug charges and she herself has been charged with possession of drug paraphernalia and maintaining a dwelling for the use of a controlled substance. [redacted] were both charged during "Operation Spring Bling," a police sting several weeks ago that targeted six private residences and resulted in drug and/or weapon charges against 38 suspects. [redacted] says losing her home and her job were directly tied to her arrest: Her landlord wants her out because her home at [redacted] was one of six raided by police and her employer fired her after her arrest mugshot showed up in The Daily Advance. [redacted], who maintains she and her son are innocent of the charges facing them, says the public reaction to their arrests has been unfairly cruel. "Right now when cars go past I have fingers pointed at me," she said. "(People say,) 'That's the lady. I didn't know she did (things like) this.'" [redacted] claims neighborhood children used to wave to her, and some - -- like one little boy riding his bike past her house one day last week -- still do. She says the ones who don't believe the charges tell her, "Ms. Ann" -- as they call her -- "we know you didn't do what police say you did." But the loss of reputation she's suffered is palpable. "... It's hard when you had so much respect; you had children looking up to you; you had employers calling on you because you were dependable at work," she said. "And now (it's hard) to show my face." [redacted] believes the charges against both her and her son -- [redacted] is charged with possession with intent to sell and deliver cocaine and felony sale and delivery of a schedule II controlled substance -- are the result of nosy cops intent on making a case against them. [redacted] said police have searched her home four times in the past four years, and each time haven't found any drugs. In 2005, the home she was then living in on West Fearing Street was searched twice -- each time with her consent, she says. The police attention, however, eventually cost her the home: she was later evicted. [redacted] moved to [redacted] Avenue within the past year, and again the police scrutiny continued. She claims that it still continues, and she may not be wrong: while she sat on her front porch last week, a police cruiser drove by twice in 40 minutes. The intersection next to [redacted]'s home -- she lives on the corner of [redacted] -- appears to be a popular spot in her neighborhood. A number of people like to congregate there, as they did on a recent afternoon. [redacted] says the crowded corner isn't her fault. "This is a high activity area," she said. "Their main stop is right there on the corner. And I cannot tell anyone where they should be at (or) where they should go because the streets are not owned by me." [redacted] said friends of her three sons also come by her house to hang out, and that probably doesn't look good to police. She says the teens tell her their problems and she gives them advice about everything from school to life. "If I can stop a child from quitting school; if I can stop a child from selling drugs or being in the gang; that's who I am," she said. But [redacted] wasn't able to stop her son [redacted] from joining a gang. [redacted] admits [redacted] has been a member of the Bloods street gang, and that he's been arrested for several serious crimes. In June, [redacted] was found guilty of felony possession of a schedule II controlled substance. He is also facing charges filed in 2008 of robbery with a dangerous weapon and assault causing serious bodily injury as well as simple assault arising from a March incident. [redacted] claims [redacted] is trying to change his life. He in fact paid the price when he left the Bloods, she said. "He's been seriously injured for leaving the gang," [redacted] said, saying his former gang members jumped him. "And they're still trying to fight him. So's the Crips trying to get him, and he has some of the cops against him. So he's fighting a bigger war than I am." Despite those odds, [redacted] has been working on his GED, [redacted] says. His hope was to enter the military but his felony drug conviction likely won't allow that to happen, she said. [redacted] said she's tired of the police scrutiny, particularly the searches. "I have a lot of sleepless nights from (police) running up in the house four times (and) never finding anything," [redacted] said. "Enough is enough. During the latest search -- the one that led to [redacted]'s and her son's arrests -- [redacted] says that she and most of the nine other people in her house were in bed asleep when police came knocking Friday, June 19, about 6:45 a.m. [redacted] claims the approximately eight officers, clutching a search warrant and brandishing weapons, actually did more than knock. "They did knock the door down because of the indentation on the door from the ram thing," [redacted] said. "(They were) yelling 'get down, get down, get down.'" [redacted] said the officers ordered everyone in the house outside while they searched for drugs and guns. [redacted] said besides her three sons, her house guests included a nephew and his girlfriend, a woman who had been staying with [redacted], and a friend and her two young children who were waiting for a ride to the bus station. "My oldest son, they flipped him off the mattress," [redacted] said. "All of us was at gunpoint. They made us leave out the house in handcuffs all sitting at one side. ... It was so painful to see my kids laying on the floor with guns pointing at them." Friends later bailed [redacted] and her son out of jail. "When I got out (of jail), it was just a lot of tears," [redacted] said. "That's all. Nobody wanted to talk about it." Aside from convictions for traffic offenses, [redacted] has two convictions for resisting a public officer, once in 2001 and another for an incident in 2009. [redacted] claims both times she was intervening to protect her son from run-ins with police. For their part, police say the houses targeted during Operation Spring Bling were selected because of neighbors' complaints about excessive traffic and other disturbances. Most of the warrants issued were the result of drug sales from controlled buys by undercover police officials. Police Chief Charles Crudup said that executing a search warrant is always dangerous for police officers. They place their guns "in the ready position" because they have to be prepared against would-be attackers, he said. "We always announce our presence, and we secure everyone in the house," he said. That involves getting all of the people in the house into one area and patting them down for weapons before the search even starts, he said. Crudup said none of the houses targeted in the operation or any others for which the police have search warrants are randomly selected. "Everybody's innocent until proven guilty," he said. "We have done our investigations, and we're sure what they have been arrested for (that) the charges are appropriate." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr