A last-minute attempt to loosen the city's employee drug and alcohol testing policy received a unanimous thumbs-down Tuesday from the Greenwood City Council. All council members voted to delay action on the proposal indefinitely and directed City Attorney James Littleton to draft a tighter version of the drug policy within the next 30 days. Greenwood Mayor Sheriel Perkins was not present at Tuesday's meeting. She and her family were in Washington attending the presidential inauguration of Barack Obama. [continues 380 words]
Forfeiture revenue allocated to the Hattiesburg Police Department over the past six fiscal years has amounted to nearly $1.4 million, most of which was used to purchase new cars, public documents show. Documents show the department has used its forfeiture revenue for new vehicles and other equipment along with training materials and machinery tools. Recently, HPD allocated forfeiture funds to build a car service center. "We want to enhance our effectiveness by equipping our officers with the best possible equipment," said Assistant Police Chief Frank Misenhelter, adding that the department's forfeiture revenue varies from year to year. "Vehicles, cameras, computers, surveillance equipment, weapons - that's what we utilize these funds for. [continues 773 words]
Thank you for publishing Stan White's (Jan, 4) letter detailing some of the damage the prohibition of drugs causes our children. Stan is correct that the problem lies in having black-market dealers selling drugs who do not enforce age or quality controls. If meth were sold in regulated markets, only adults could buy it and it would know dosage. Yes, meth is a terrible drug, but if it were legal no one would be "pushing it" and users would only harm themselves. [continues 142 words]
In response to the editorial of Dec. 28, "Meth is a nightmare that won't go away," Government is partly responsible for America's high addiction rates to honest hard drugs like methamphetamine, cocaine and heroin, due to its discredited prohibition of cannabis (marijuana). The question isn't if, but rather what percentage of America's drug problem is due to prohibiting the relatively safe, socially acceptable, God-given plant cannabis? How many youths and adults try cannabis and realize it's not nearly as harmful as taught in government environments? Then they think other substances must not be so bad either, only to become addicted to deadly drugs. [continues 70 words]
The meth lab is the moonshine still of the 21st Century. If we allowed adult citizens of Mississippi access to the same amphetamines that we give to Air Force pilots to fly long missions, Mississippi would no longer have a meth problem. The solution to meth and meth labs has been in front of you the whole time. The war on drugs is the most destructive, dysfunctional and immoral domestic policy since slavery and Jim Crow. Drug dealers only fear one thing: legalization. Howard J. Wooldridge Education specialist Law Enforcement Against Prohibition Washington, D.C. [end]
In common lore, cocaine in powder form is for celebrities and elites, in rock form it's for the inner-city poor while homemade crystal methamphetamine is the narcotic of choice for the pickup truck crowd. Based on arrest patterns here during the year, there's more than a little truth to the lore. Meth is insidious. There are no multinational meth cartels. There are only recipes - chemical processes, sometimes explosive, to refine the drug in almost any kitchen. Addiction is immediate, strong and destructive. Meth-heads will do anything to get the drug, which means most robberies and burglaries can be traced to this poison. [continues 185 words]
U.S. District Judge Dan Jordan has ruled that Mayor Frank Melton can't use the term "crack house" during his upcoming federal civil rights trial in describing alleged illegal drug activity at the duplex on Ridgeway Street that has been the center of his legal woes for more than two years. That ruling leads one to wonder just how Melton should refer to the former residence in mounting his defense. What should he call it? A fixer-upper? The House on Pooh Corner? Little House on the Prairie? [continues 464 words]
It can truthfully be said that the cost of drug abuse in terms of wrecked lives and misery cannot be calculated. This type of damage is both tragic and irreparable. But dollars and cents costs are also borne by a community - sometimes needlessly. Consider that Vicksburg has only one gated residential area with 24-hour security and key-card access. It's not for the super-rich. It's Waltersville estates, an apartment complex on North Washington Street owned and operated by the Vicksburg Housing Authority. [continues 346 words]
The killings in Jackson so far this year were fueled by drugs, arguments or revenge. Others were robberies gone bad, and a few were the result of domestic. Sometimes the victims knew their attackers. Sometimes they didn't. In most cases, both victim and suspect were of the same race. Jackson's 73 homicides have happened in every corner of the city, from outside nightclubs to shady motels and vacant buildings. Some victims also were discovered in their own homes or cars. [continues 1700 words]
Dealing a blow to years of work and recent gains in youth drug prevention, Massachusetts has joined a growing, but still short, list of states to decriminalize marijuana possession. At least that is the intention of some 65 percent of voters checking "Yes" on a ballot initiative that makes possession of an ounce or less of marijuana a civil offense (punishable by a ticket) as opposed to a criminal one. And this on the same day that the same voters approved a ban on greyhound racing. [continues 667 words]
Mayor Frank Melton will enter a courtroom this week for the third time in two years to face criminal charges arising from his cowboy crime-fighting style. This time, he'll face the federal government and charges that could land him in prison for up to 25 years. While Melton's reputation for unorthodox behavior goes back to his days as a television commentator, as mayor he sounded an early warning in his July 4, 2005, inaugural address. "We will deal with crime in a way you have never seen before," he said. [continues 1139 words]
Standing before a class of fifth graders Tuesday at Central School, Detective Sgt. Zate McGee told students what they could expect for the next several weeks. "We're going to talk a lot about drugs and alcohol and abuse of those things," McGee said. Over the next 10 weeks, she will be visiting four fifth grade classrooms at Central to teach the Drug Abuse Resistance Education Program, commonly known as D.A.R.E.. "This semester, I have 264 students at Central," McGee said. Next semester, D.A.R.E. will come to Oak Hill Academy and other fifth grade classes at Central. [continues 455 words]
KUDOS TO the Hattiesburg Police Department, which has had several high-profile drug busts in the last several months. The latest was Wednesday, when police stopped two men - from Georgia and Texas - for a traffic violation and ended up finding 37 kilograms of powered cocaine, valued at more than $1.5 million. Not bad for a day's work. It came on top of a drug bust at a local man's home, also Wednesday, where more than $50,000 in drug money and weapons were found. [continues 193 words]
I've never been much of a Frank Melton fan. Back in the days when he was the blunt-speaking broadcaster from Jackson on the chicken dinner circuit, he was too much of a showboat for my taste. I never really bought into his shtick. He would forever arrive late at an event where he was the featured speaker, mesmerize the audience with his bashing of saggy-pantsed, earring-wearing black males and those who coddle them, then blow right back out. I always thought he had way too high an opinion of himself. [continues 624 words]
Feds Prosecuting a Crime He Was Acquitted Of, Mayor Says A day after being indicted by a federal grand jury, Jackson Mayor Frank Melton belittled the charges as lacking heft despite their heavyweight appearance. After more than a year of investigating Melton, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Wednesday that Melton and his police bodyguards Marcus Wright and Michael Recio had been charged with two civil rights violations and a gun charge as a result of their role in wrecking a duplex on Ridgeway Street in west Jackson. [continues 971 words]
For metro-Jackson residents, last week's indictment of Mayor Frank Melton and his two police bodyguards seems like deja vu. After all, Jackson's first-term mayor spent eight months successfully fighting a criminal indictment for his role in damaging a reputed drug house the night of Aug. 26, 2006. That fight ended in an April 2007 trial and not-guilty verdicts for Melton and Jackson police Detectives Marcus Wright and Michael Recio, his bodyguards. The new indictment stems from the same event, but the charges come from the federal system, making it a whole new ballgame for the three men. [continues 920 words]
GULFPORT --The seizure of 500 plants that looked like marijuana in Harrison County in 2003 did not violate the land-user's civil rights, the 5th Court of Appeals has ruled. The decision upholds a federal judge's dismissal of Marion "Bucky" Waltman's civil lawsuit against former Sheriff George H. Payne Jr. The ruling was filed Thursday. The crop was kenaf planted as deer food on land leased by the Boarhog Hunting Club. Waltman planted the crop based on research at Mississippi State University. The research concluded that kenaf, used to make paper, could also attract deer and provide larger hunting trophies. [continues 380 words]
Gov. Haley Barbour signed a bill into law earlier this year to restore common sense to sentencing in the criminal courts - making some 7,000 inmates eligible for parole by relaxing sentencing guidelines. Senate Bill 2136 relaxed the state's so-called 85-percent rule, passed in an ill-advised moment in 1994 when the Legislature took the federal government's "get tough on crime" challenge and raised it. The so-called "Truth in Sentencing" law was the result of a nationwide push for tougher sentencing, and Mississippi lawmakers responded. This newspaper supported the law. Famous last words: It seemed like a good idea at the time. [continues 325 words]
Saving Taxpayer Dollars While Offering Effective Treatment, Tough Regimen Remains Goal While The Clarion-Ledger editors would frown on my leaving a large open space on their editorial pages, I believe that this statement does, in fact, succinctly sum up the case for drug courts. For those unfamiliar with drug courts, they are special courts given the responsibility to handle cases involving drug-using offenders through comprehensive supervision, drug testing, treatment services and immediate sanctions and incentives. Drug courts rely upon the daily communication and cooperation of judges, court personnel, probation and treatment providers. [continues 1288 words]
Ten-year-old Claire eagerly raised her hand to answer the officer's question of what makes a good friend. She waited impatiently, trying her best not to squeal for him to point to her. When he finally did she said with confidence, "You can trust them." Claire was one of 18 students in Dorothy Aldridge's fifth-grade class at Della Davidson Elementary who participated in the Drug Abuse Resistance Education (D.A.R.E.) program this spring. The national preventative drug and alcohol program just finished its first year of operation at the new Oxford fourth- and fifth-grade school. [continues 731 words]