Mother reveals ice habit as Australia battles epidemic

Leesa Holman, pictured, used to use $800 worth of meth everyday – it tore apart her family and her kids were taken away 

Leesa Holman used to use $800 worth of ice every day paying her drug debt by dealing on the street or by sleeping with her dealer.

The 40-year-old mum-of-three from Perth in Western Australia has been clean for four and a half years, managed to ‘get the kids back’ and is trying to leave the horrors of her drug-addled past behind. 

But it isn’t easy, one of her children was damaged by the ice she took in pregnancy, and she still has flashbacks of finding her best friend who took her own life to escape the drug. 

Despite being part of the scene for so long, the former user and dealer is still left in shock by the havoc caused by the ‘ice epidemic’ – and cringes when she hears small country towns have been ‘taken over by the drug’. 

Once sleepy towns in every state are being torn apart by the ice scourge  where the impacts of the drug are harder felt.

Some of the hardest hit towns include Wellington in NSW, St George in Queensland, Murray Bridge in South Australia, Smithton in Tasmania, Katherine in the Northern Territory, Albany in Western Australia and Sale in Victoria.

The mum-of-three is now almost unrecogniseable, four years after giving up her habit, and says her children 'finally have the mum they deserve

The mum-of-three is now almost unrecogniseable, four years after giving up her habit, and says her children ‘finally have the mum they deserve

She is speaking out after country towns across Australia were identified as being 'ice hot-spots' and wants to help other families from the pain brought on by meth

She is speaking out after country towns across Australia were identified as being ‘ice hot-spots’ and wants to help other families from the pain brought on by meth

Margaret Gordon from Ice Breakers in Albany, WA, helps people beat their addiction - and has been working 'on the frontline against ice' since her grandson became hooked

Margaret Gordon from Ice Breakers in Albany, WA, helps people beat their addiction – and has been working ‘on the frontline against ice’ since her grandson became hooked

‘Every time I drive back through some of those old streets and see primary-school aged dealers with bum bags on and gold chains around their necks I cringe.

‘I can’t understand why these kids are doing this with their lives,’ Ms Holman told Daily Mail Australia,

Margaret Gordon from Ice Breakers in Albany should be retired – but she has been working on the frontline against meth addiction since her own grandson ‘fell victim to the insidious drug’.

‘It is readily available, which is a huge problem, every town in Australia has a problem with it – whether they can see it or not.’

Ms Holman was heavily addicted to ice and used a gram a day – looking back she is ashamed of how violent she would become after ‘being awake for a week’.

‘I would pull knives on people, break through doors, scream,’ she said.

She is also ashamed of the violence witnessed by her kids.

‘One day my friend charged into the kitchen with a machete in her hand and tried to cut my head off, my son walked in and saw his mum pinned against the wall, he shouldn’t have had to see it.’

Ms Holman said she won’t touch meth again – finally ‘realises how much it means to have a happy home for her children’.

Ms Holman pictured at her 40th birthday - she says she feels better than she did when she was 30 and is happy with her life

Ms Holman pictured at her 40th birthday – she says she feels better than she did when she was 30 and is happy with her life

She now puts her kids first - and is horrified by the things she exposed them to when she was high on ice

She now puts her kids first – and is horrified by the things she exposed them to when she was high on ice

Pictured here, in the grips of her addiction, the mum remembers the moment her toddler saw a woman attack her with a machete - as if violence like that was normal

Pictured here, in the grips of her addiction, the mum remembers the moment her toddler saw a woman attack her with a machete – as if violence like that was normal

‘It isn’t easy to come off it took me a few years, my kids went into care for 18 months so that I could really concentrate on myself and get off it for good.’ 

Her best friend had been a ‘role model’ for Ms Holman.

The mum-of-three was left struggling to cope when she walked into her backyard after the school drop-off one morning to find her friend ‘hanging in the backyard’.

ICE HOT-SPOTS IN AUSTRALIA

Murray Bridge, South Australia:

The crisis has reached boiling point in the farming town which is home to 17,000 people. 

An elderly woman has revealed how she was ‘chased down the street by a man with a running chainsaw’ after making hundreds of complaints about the dealing in her street.

Mandy, 68, who declined to give her last name, claims there are eight meth dealers in her street – and said in the past ten years her town has been ‘destroyed’ by drugs.

St George, Queensland: 

The farming community is currently in crisis mode as it has been revealed children as young as 10 are addicted to the drug.

Teenagers are being force-fed meth so they can stay awake at school and drug dens forging the deadly substance are operating out of family homes.

Arrests have surged in the past three years, going from 65 in 2014 to 235 in the past 12 months, nearly 10 per cent of the farming town’s population.

An 18-month sting by police resulted in the arrests, including eight locals for drug trafficking.

Wellington, New South Wales: 

Wellington in western NSW has such a sordid history with crystal methamphetamine that it has come to be known as ‘little Antarctica’.

The television program ‘Ice Wars’ centered on the tiny town of 4,000.

The mother of one addict revealed she kept her money safe by ‘sleeping with her purse’ to keep it away from her son.

Katherine, Northern Territory:

The meth crisis saw a youth worker and former corrections officer from Katherine in the Northern Territory fired last year – after he was caught driving with ice in his system.

Katherine which is south of Darwin has been labelled the meth capital of the NT.

Smithton, Tasmania: 

The huge drug problem in Smithton, Tasmania prompted the documentary Two Trains which features Jacqui Lambie talking about her son’s addiction.

Sale, Victoria: 

The Gippsland tourist town of Sale has been described as being ‘riddled’ with ice addicts – with young professionals, tradies and university students picking up the pipe.

In 2015 police revealed the drug was so popular in the town people were ‘making it in the back of cars’ before selling it on the street.

Chemicals and equipment found in a methamphetamine manufacturing lab

Chemicals and equipment found in a methamphetamine manufacturing lab

‘She had been off it for almost two years, then she started to be pulled back into the scene, instead of going back to being dependent on it she killed herself.

‘My partner who was also my dealer at the time couldn’t handle it – he tried to hang himself and failed but ended up committing suicide days later– it was after we had been awake for ten days, it was a destructive time.’

When she was forced to deal to come up with the cash for her own habit she found ‘everyone’ was on it – some of her frequent customers included ‘other mums, lawyers, school teachers and former heroin addicts’.  

The mother sold drugs to other parents as well as young professionals

The mum pictured with one of her children during the height of her addiction - which went on for almost five years

The mum pictured with her children during the height of her addiction – which went on for almost five years

This clandestine drug laboratory in Cowra, NSW was uncovered in 2015

This clandestine drug laboratory in Cowra, NSW was uncovered in 2015

Picture shows a drug lab dismantled by police in south-west Sydney

Picture shows a drug lab dismantled by police in south-west Sydney

She refused to sell to children under 17 but knew children as young as 12 who would use daily.

Ice Breaker’s Ms Gordon said ice is dangerous because it effects everyone – this means children can also access the drug and get addicted.

‘There are young children who are experimenting with ice because they are in homes where it is readily available and their conditioned to the fact that using it is normal.

‘The youngest person I know who uses it is 11 but I am aware of children starting younger,’ she said.

Ice Breaker's Ms Gordon, pictured here with co-worker Craig, believes the idea of 'hot-spots' in naive

Ice Breaker’s Ms Gordon, pictured here with co-worker Craig, believes the idea of ‘hot-spots’ in naive

Mandy, 68, says she was chased down the street by someone holding a running chainsaw in Murray Bridge, where she lives on the same street as eight ice dealers

Mandy, 68, says she was chased down the street by someone holding a running chainsaw in Murray Bridge, where she lives on the same street as eight ice dealers

But Ms Gordon, who helps addicts throughout Western Australia believes the term ‘hot-spots’ is naive.

‘I really don’t believe that anywhere is worse than anywhere else it is just if there is a larger population there are more people but it is the same percentage.’

According to Cracks in the ice, an online Government-funded toolkit about the meth crisis, 1.3 million Australians have used the drug – with rural and regional towns hit hardest. 

When she was still using ice she would be awake for seven days at a time

She still struggles to drive through some suburbs where she witnessed bad things while on ice

The mother, pictured left on ice and right off, was shocked to hear 1.3 million Australians have tried meth



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