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News (Media Awareness Project) - US GA: Celebrated Hostage Gave Crystal Meth to Captor
Title:US GA: Celebrated Hostage Gave Crystal Meth to Captor
Published On:2005-09-28
Source:New York Times (NY)
Fetched On:2008-01-15 12:16:48
CELEBRATED HOSTAGE GAVE CRYSTAL METH TO CAPTOR

Ashley Smith, who was held hostage in her apartment in March by the
man now charged with murder in the Atlanta courthouse shootings, was
hailed as a hero after she disclosed how she had persuaded her captor
to surrender, partly by reading to him from the spiritual best seller
"The Purpose-Driven Life."

But in a memoir released yesterday, Ms. Smith also recounts that she
gave the kidnapper some of her supply of crystal methamphetamine
during her captivity and that she did not tell the police for some
time afterward.

In the memoir, "Unlikely Angel: The Untold Story of the Atlanta Hostage
Hero," Ms. Smith recalls that Brian Nichols, who has been charged in
the death of three people shot at the Fulton County Courthouse and a
fourth killed elsewhere in Atlanta soon before her kidnapping, asked
her if she had any marijuana. She answered no but said she did have
some "ice," or crystal meth.

Ms. Smith says that at the time, she was fighting an addiction to
crystal methamphetamine that had previously led her to spend time in a
psychiatric hospital and to lose custody of her 5-year-old daughter.

She says she last used crystal meth about 36 hours before being taken
hostage. Though Mr. Nichols used it and invited her to do so, she
refused, she writes, and has not taken drugs since the episode.

"Suddenly, looking down at my drug pouch," she says, "I realized that
I would rather have died in my apartment than have done those drugs
with Brian Nichols. If the cops were going to bust in here and find me
dead, they were not going to find drugs in me when they did the
autopsy. I was not going to die tonight and stand before God, having
done a bunch of ice up my nose."

The book, written with Stacy Mattingly, is being published by William
Morrow and Zondervan, units of HarperCollins Publishers. Zondervan is
also the publisher of "The Purpose-Driven Life."

The book's drug revelations were first reported yesterday by The
Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Two weeks after the arrest of Mr. Nichols, Ms. Smith received $72,500
in reward money from various law enforcement agencies, including the
F.B.I. and the United States Marshals Service. Richard Kolko, a
special agent at the Federal Bureau of Investigation, said in an
interview yesterday that the disclosure about Ms. Smith's supply of
crystal meth was unlikely to affect her reward.

"The woman did a brave act at a desperate time," Mr. Kolko said. "The
F.B.I. has no reason or inclination to go back and retrieve the reward."
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