Pubdate: Thu, 22 Sep 2011 Source: Florida Times-Union (FL) Copyright: 2011 The Florida Times-Union Contact: http://www.jacksonville.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/155 Author: Tonya Weathersbee, Columnist THE DESTRUCTIVE RIPPLES OF DRUG USE On many levels, John Reilly Schultz is a sick man. He even said so himself. Unlike many of the people who turn to using or selling drugs because they see it as a way of escaping neglected, impoverished communities that are short on jobs and long on despair, Schultz didn't have that hurdle. He's a developer. He has a respected family name. He has children. And he has a $500,000 home in Ortega. Yet while those advantages weren't enough to stop him from pursuing a crack cocaine habit, what happened last October should not have taken place. That was when Schultz, now 47, was awaiting a delivery of crack cocaine in a drug house off Blanding Boulevard. Then, according to the Times-Union, the dealers his supplier had visited started shooting at each other. Caught in the gunfire was Analiza Gobaton, a nurse who was on her way to an awards program at her children's school. Gobaton, 41, died two days later. Now her husband, John, wants Schultz and others who were in the drug house that day to be held accountable. Schultz, however, told the Times-Union that he wasn't responsible for her death because he didn't fire a gun. But if he was truly a sick guy trying to get well, he'd acknowledge that his drug habit, a habit that fueled the shootout that killed Gobaton, as well as the drug habits of countless other users, is contributing to the deaths of people and communities everywhere. In Mexico, which is the United States' third-largest trading partner and our nearest southern neighbor, more than 34,612 people are estimated to have been killed by drug-related violence since 2006. Most of that violence has been generated by warring drug cartels. The U.S. State Department says as much as 90 percent of all cocaine sold here comes through Mexico. Sales are estimated to top $60 billion annually. But one doesn't have to look to Mexico to see the devastation that drug use - and the ensuing drug war - has inflicted on people's lives. Right here in Jacksonville there are places like Eureka Gardens, as well as other older communities, where the drug trade has filled the economic void. It's a predicament that has led many young, mostly black men to start selling drugs to make money, and the violence that comes along with it has forced many residents to behave like prisoners, instead of citizens, in their own neighborhoods. Kids grow up learning their ABCs along with how to scramble beneath a bed at the sounds of gunfire, and mothers are forced to have to raise their children in fear. Sometimes, people like Gobaton wind up getting killed in the crossfire, while in the meantime, drug users like Schultz can just escape back to Ortega, or some grand gated place, while shrugging off their role in keeping drug and crime-filled neighborhoods mired in despair. "Yes, the drug dealers are responsible for shooting people," Marc Mauer, director of The Sentencing Project, a research and advocacy organization that fights for fairer drug and sentencing laws, told me. "But there's a real demand chain that contributes to this." Mauer stopped short of saying that Schultz should face murder charges for Gobaton's slaying. While it's clear that Schultz had chances to clear up his habit, I still believe that prison should be for those who actually do the killing. But instead of insisting that he isn't responsible for Gobaton's death - - a death that left a husband without a wife and three children without a mother - that tragedy ought to at least force Schultz to acknowledge that his sickness destroys more lives than his own. And I hope that one day soon, that acknowledgement might be part of what motivates him to finally get well. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.