Pubdate: Sun, 12 Jun 2005
Source: Kamloops This Week (CN BC)
Copyright: 2005 Kamloops This Week
Contact:  http://www.kamloopsthisweek.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1271
Author: Rafe Arnottstaff
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?143 (Hepatitis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

SEX, DRUGS AND MURDER

The grainy, enlarged photograph of Cynthia Feliks stared out at John 
Anderson from the front page of the paper.

It was a face from the past, and Anderson stood mutely in line at the 
checkout stand, unable to tear his eyes from her picture as he clutched the 
newspaper.

"You gonna buy that or read it?" the clerk queried.

Anderson could barely see through his tears and bolted from the store.

The words come out haltingly, each syllable spit out from his grimaced 
mouth: "I got so pissed off. I wanted him to eat it (the newspaper). I 
left, I just came home."

Remembering the incident leaves him clearly shaken, his slight frame 
doubles over and he rocks himself lightly on the dirty sofa cushions.

Feliks was Anderson's common-law wife for a number of years, and the image 
in question was one of 12 faces splashed across Canadian tabloids that day 
- - faces forensic experts had identified in May as belonging to women whose 
DNA had been found on Robert Pickton's Port Coquitlam farm.

"It's just too awful to remember," Anderson says with a grimace. "I know 
what happened there. I've met all kinds of murderers, rapists and 
arsonists. You name it. I know people have the capacity for evil."

Anderson pauses, his eyes searching the dimly lit jumble of books, computer 
equipment, dirty dishes and ashtrays spread throughout his tiny living room.

"She was out of my life, but never out of my mind."

The story of Feliks and Anderson is a tale of drugs, sex and murder. It is 
a cautionary tale, and Anderson is living proof of the consequences of poor 
choices made at a young age, being both HIV-positive and a victim of 
hepatitis C.

"We met because I was a heroin trafficker and she was a very good-looking, 
expensive hooker with a lot of money and a big heroin habit."

Having been in and out of jail in both the United States and Canada, with 
what a judge once aptly described as a "rap sheet as long as both arms," 
Anderson has first-hand experience with society's underworld.

He fled the Lower Mainland six years ago with nothing more than a paper bag 
full of some personal tokens.

He is vague about how he even got to Kamloops.

A bus?

Perhaps he hitched a ride?

A heroin addiction picked up at age 16 led to a job dealing drugs to 
support a $1,000-a-day habit.

"I considered what I was doing a favour to other people in the same [boat]. 
I didn't get days off. I worked 24/7, 365 days a week - 366 on leap years."

His life now is a far cry from his days as a bit player in the drug world. 
He lives alone, is on disability and can barely make ends meet.

"I'm used to walking around with thousands of dollars. I had two rental 
cars, two hotel rooms and an apartment. "Everything I had went out the 
window when I went to jail."

Anderson said parents must educate themselves about drug use among teens.

"Don't believe what your kids say. If they're doing drugs they're not going 
to tell you. What they should do is check their children's eyes (if they 
suspect drug use).

"It's in the eyes - it's easy to tell."

As Anderson notes, not many 30-year-olds walk out their door with plans to 
become a drug addict.

"It happens when you are kid when you make choices on phony, bogus 
information," he says. "Sixteen-year-olds don't make good choices most of 
the time anyways. Add drugs, and a party - alcohol to the mix - alcohol is 
the leading drug into all the others."

Anderson says it's after drinking that drugs usually come out.

"Someone has a joint, or ecstasy, and that leads to a [drug] that they like 
best."

He says it's a horrendous thing "when you see a 12, 13, or 14 year-old-girl 
selling [themselves] for a piece of rock crack.

"Being a sex-trade worker is the most dangerous job in Canada. How many 
sex-trade workers were killed in B.C. in the last 10 years? 100? 200? 300? 
400? Because crack cocaine changes your brain pattern. The only thing you 
think of is more cocaine. Sleep? Food? Your own natural body functions? 
They stop."

Men will pay large sums of money for young women - the younger the woman, 
the more money men will pay, Anderson says, stabbing the air with a 
cigarette held between nicotine-stained fingers.

"They (pimps) get them wired up on dope, and once they're at that point 
they're at their mercy. Eventually they will do anything for that bag. . . 
I mean anything.

"Even going to a pig farm, and getting murdered and eaten by pigs. If that 
ain't a tale of a dead end, I don't know what is."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom