Pubdate: Wed, 19 Jul 2000 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2000 Globe Newspaper Company. Contact: P.O. Box 2378, Boston, MA 02107-2378 Feedback: http://extranet.globe.com/LettersEditor/default.asp Website: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Author: Associated Press US WANTS JOINT NE EFFORT VS. PURE HEROIN New England faces the threat of an influx of heroin so pure that users can inhale, snort or eat it instead of injecting it with needles, White House drug enforcement coordinator Barry McCaffrey warned yesterday. McCaffrey will meet today with law enforcement leaders from the six New England states to discuss how to combat the problem. McCaffrey said the high-purity heroin comes to the area primarily from New York City, but the Canadian border also remains vulnerable to drug smugglers. "It's essentially unguarded," McCaffrey said. "The northern border is a frontier.... Cooperation between the Royal Canadian Mounted Police has been superb. But there's very little manpower up there." Last year, McCaffrey established the New England High-Intensity Drug Trafficking Area with $1 million in federal funding. The funding has allowed local law enforcement officials to link up with FBI agents, federal drug enforcement agents, and other agencies. There are 30 other such zones across the country. McCaffrey said the goal was to "target these people [smugglers] for prosecution, to focus on the pipeline, and not just take small-scale criminals off the streets." The New England effort only covers 12 counties in the six states. That means that the program still hasn't arrived in some counties that have heroin problems, such as Middlesex County, which has a substantial trade based in Lowell. McCaffrey said he would ask New England law enforcement officials which counties should be added to the program and he thought Middlesex would be among those suggested. The program's budget this year has increased to over $1.85 million. McCaffreypromised to seek more funding to add new counties. McCaffrey said it was too early to tell how well the program was working. "I think the payoff will happen in the coming years," McCaffrey said. Colonel Edmund Culhane, head of the Rhode Island State Police, said that in his state, more large drug seizures have been made since the HIDTA program began. He also said that working with other states would enable him to dismantle much larger drug operations. The theory behind the HIDTA program is that local police in drug- riddled areas need help to fight criminal organizations that can easily spill over jurisdictional boundaries. McCaffrey said that Connecticut's Bradley International Airport, as well as airports in Manchester, N.H.; Burlington, Vt.; and Warwick, R.I. were vulnerable to drug traffickers. John Gartland, special agent in charge at the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in New England, agreed with McCaffrey. "[High-purity heroin] is everywhere," Gartland said. "We're seeing it in Bangor, Maine; we're seeing it in Cape Cod." In another indication of the threat posed by heroin, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health said Tuesday that, in 1992, 15 percent of people admitted into state-run rehabilitation programs listed heroin as their primary drug. By 1999, the number of people claiming heroin addiction had more than doubled to 32 percent, while the numbers claiming addiction to cocaine, marijuana and alcohol declined. - --- MAP posted-by: John Chase