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News Release [print friendly page]
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 28, 2003

DEA & CHICAGO BEARS TEAM-UP
FOR THE 2003 RED RIBBON ANTI-DRUG CAMPAIGN
Role Models and Positive Life Choices Equal Drug-Free Kids

OCT 28--CHICAGO, IL - Chicago Bears Jerry Azumah and Charles Tillman teamed up with the Drug Enforcement Administration, Chicago Police, and Chicago School Kids to 'Kick-Off' the annual RED RIBBON Anti-Drug Celebration. As part of DEA's weeklong, national drug awareness campaign, the RED RIBBON message encourages school age children to make positive choices and stay drug-free.

Chicago Bears Players

Chicago Bears Players Jerry Azumah (left) and Charles Tillman (right) sport DEA Chicago hats in honor and support of the Chicago Field Division's Red Ribbon Week Celebration.
Chicago Bears Players Jerry Azumah and Charles Tillman join DEA Chicago personnel

Chicago Bears Players Jerry Azumah and Charles Tillman join DEA Chicago personnel to get out the Red Ribbon Message. Pictured Left to Right are: SA Chris Hoyt, Charles Tillman, SA Gary Boertlein, SAC Rick Sanders, Jerry Azumah and DI Joe Mele.
DEA  helicopter arriving

The DEA Airwing 'topped-off' the Chicago Red Ribbon event by landing at schools in the Chicago Metro area and grabbed the attention of elementary school children for each Red Ribbon presentation, and enhanced the anti-drug message.
Pilot and Student in front of helicopter

SA/Pilot Dan Fox with a student at the Chicago FD's Red Ribbon Celebration.
View of Helicopter          Chris Hoyt speaking to the children
Chicago FD DI Joe Mele, SA Chris Hoyt and SA/Pilot Dan Fox are pictured (left center to right) meeting with area children to entertain questions about DEA and the Red Ribbon Celebration.
DEA Helicopter
Local police representatives, DEA Chicago personnel, and Parent/Teacher organization members pose with the DEA Helicopter. Pictured (left to right) P/O Mark Mitter, SA Chris Hoyt, GS Bill Maloney, SA Gary Boertlein, Principal Jamie Tighe, Group 36 Secretary Jo Ann Belmonte, and PTA Safety Organizer Corrie D'Angelo.

 

DEA Red Ribbon
Red Ribbon Week
October 23-31, 2003

 

What is Red Ribbon Week?

-a time for gratitude for all the lives that remain drug free

-a time to pledge to live a safe and drug-free life

-a time to remember those we have lost in the fight against drugs

History

photo of David Dhillon

“The resiliency of this country is amazing. There’s no country in the world that turns tragedies into super-positive things like this country...It’s unbelievable how we can bounce back from tragic events like Camarena’s death and turn it into something as wonderful as the Red Ribbon Week program.”

-David Dhillon, a co-founder of the Red Ribbon Week Program

Red Ribbon Week is an important tradition for the drug prevention community, and especially for the DEA. The event that has become a national symbol of drug prevention, began as a grassroots tribute to a fallen DEA hero, Special Agent Enrique Camarena. The National Red Ribbon Campaign was sparked by the murder of DEA Special Agent Camarena by drug traffickers. Within weeks of his death in March of 1985, Camarena’s Congressman, Duncan Hunter, and high school friend Henry Lozano, launched Camarena Clubs in Imperial Valley, California, Camarena’s home. Hundreds of club members pledged to lead drug-free lives to honor the sacrifices made by Camarena and others on behalf of all Americans. From these clubs emerged the Red Ribbon Week Campaign.

KIKI'S STORY

phot of Enrique CamarenaKiki, a 37 year old United States DEA agent and father of three sons had been investigating a multi-billion-dollar drug operation which implicated officers of the Mexican army, police, and government. As he left his office on Thursday February 7, 1985, to meet his wife for lunch, five men grabbed him as he left his office and forced him into a car. Kiki's body was found one month later in a shallow grave, 70 miles from Michoacan, Mexico. He had been tortured, beaten and brutally murdered. Kiki gave his life in the fight against drugs and always held the belief that one person could make a difference.

Enrique Camarena never asked to be a hero. All he ever wanted was a chance to make a difference, a chance to somehow help others. But growing up in a poor barrio in Mexico, Kiki must have wondered if he would get those chances.

When Kiki was nine years old, his family moved to the United States. Kiki worked with the rest of his family in the fields. As he picked peaches and plums, Kiki watched other kids head for school and he often wondered what it would be like to have a seat on the bus or a seat in a real classroom.

Kiki finally got the chance to go to school and he became a good student. In high school, he played on the football and basketball teams. He worked on the yearbook. He was even voted Best All-Around Senior.

When Kiki graduated from high school he made a big decision. He saw that some of his friends were headed for trouble, and Kiki could have followed them. Instead, he worked his way through college and earned a degree in criminal justice.

Kiki served in the Marine Corps. Then he became a fireman and finally a policeman. And when he saw that many of his friends got into trouble because of drugs, he joined the DEA. The DEA's mission to prevent drugs from coming into this country weighed into his decision to join.

Kiki knew something had to be done to stop drugs and to help the people he cared about. His mother knew that his work could be very dangerous and she even tried to talk him out of it. "No," he told her, "even if I'm only one person, I can make a difference." His mother was right. Kiki's work was often dangerous and it was lonely, too. Old friends turned against him. But Kiki kept on with his fight against drugs.

He was such a good agent that he was sent to work undercover in Mexico. For weeks, Kiki lived among the drug lords. He gathered information and evidence. Just when his work was almost finished, the drug dealers found out who he really was. They kidnapped him. They tortured him. And they killed him. After a month, his body was discovered and returned home to his family.

Kiki gave his life in the fight against drugs. He gave his life trying to help others. To honor Kiki, his family and friends wore red ribbons. As his story spread across the country, others began to wear ribbons too. Now every year millions of Americans celebrate Red Ribbon Week (October 23-31) to remember Kiki and to take a stand - just as he did - against illegal drugs. Kiki set an example for all of us. He showed us how one person can change things. And he became a hero. All Kiki wanted to do was make a difference. We hope somewhere, somehow, he can see what a difference he's still making today.

photo of kids signing Red Ribbon week posterRED RIBBON WEEK TODAY

Today, the RED RIBBON Campaign is the most recognizable teaching tool in the nation reaching millions of American school kids with a powerful message about drug abuse. No other single drug prevention movement in history has impacted so many lives.

RED RIBBON Week is nationally recognized and celebrated, helping to preserve Special Agent Camarena's memory and further the cause for which he gave his life. The Red Ribbon Campaign has also become a symbol of support for the DEA's efforts to reduce demand for drugs through prevention and education programs.

By wearing a red ribbon during the last week in October, Americans demonstrate their ardent opposition to drugs. They pay homage not only to Special Agent Camarena, but also to all men and women who have made the ultimate sacrifice in support of our nation's struggle against drug trafficking and abuse.

The DEA is proud to 'Team-up' with the Chicago Police Department, the Chicago BEARS and Chicago's KIDS to show that every child makes a difference.

red ribbon

 
www.dea.gov