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"And that, my friends, is the bottom line," became his catchphrase. His wife, a pediatrician, and his two children stayed behind in Texas, prompting vicious rumors about his personal life. Melton brushed aside criticism, and did things his own, sometimes unusual way. He became a fixture in poor neighborhoods, where he would talk to youngsters about personal accountability and hard work. He tried to broker a cease fire among gangs and volunteered as a swim instructor at an area YMCA. He was elected by a landslide in 2005 after campaigning on a tough-on-crime platform. Since then, however, he was hounded by legal problems related to his unorthodox tactics. Prosecutors say he was drunk on scotch and power when he ordered a group of young men
-- some with criminal records -- to destroy the duplex in a poor neighborhood. Melton said he was only trying rid the city of a drug den.
[Associated
Press;
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