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DA, SCHOOLS CHIEF MAKE CAMEOS IN METH VIDEO

District Attorney General Randy Nichols did not set out to be in the movies.  Neither did Knox County Schools Superintendent Charles Lindsey.

But Wednesday morning, both men were filmed for cameo roles in a video called "Meth is Death."

No, it's not a fictional police thriller.  It is a deadly serious warning about the dangers of methamphetamine and the pitfalls of becoming involved with that drug.

Nichols and Lindsey were at Community Television of Knoxville studios, where they were filmed making comments that will be used in the introduction of the video.  The rest of the film was completed earlier this year.

"Meth is Death" was created by the statewide Tennessee District Attorneys General Conference for schools throughout the state.

It will be shown to all middle schools and high schools in the Knox County school system, beginning next week.  About 30,000 students will see the video.

It was deemed "too graphic" to be shown to elementary school pupils, Lindsey said.

"You can call it a scare tactic, but it needs to be scary," Lindsey said.  "We are willing to try just about anything to encourage kids to stay away from meth ...  it is an extremely dangerous drug."

The video includes pictures of people before and after they became hooked on the drug.

"It is a very compelling film," said Nichols.  "We are confident that once the kids see the first couple of minutes of it, they will watch it all the way through."

Community Television of Knoxville also will show the video next week on the cable education channel ( 10 on Comcast ) it has set aside for the Knox County school system.  It will be shown Monday through Friday, every half hour between 7 a.m.  and noon, said CTV General Manager David Vogel.

The District Attorneys General Conference decided to prepare the video because the use and production of meth -- short for methamphetamine -- is on the rise in Tennessee, and Federal authorities have identified the Sequatchie Valley area as one of the top meth areas in the country, he said.

Originally it was produced mainly by users, who would sell to other users, and is very widespread in poor rural areas.  But now Mexican cartels are beginning wholesale production, "and you can see what this will start to mean for our urban areas," Nichols said.

The drug is instantly addictive to nearly everyone who uses it just once, and only about four out of 100 addicts are able to break the habit, he said.