Pubdate: Sun, 31 Dec 2000 Source: Ottawa Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2000, Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: 380 Hunt Club Rd., Ottawa, Ontario, K1G 5H7 Website: http://www.canoe.ca/OttawaSun/ Forum: http://www.canoe.ca/Chat/home.html Author: John Steinbachs COPS UNITE IN DRUG FIGHT To the officers patrolling the streets of Fournier it was becoming obvious earlier this year employees of a local bar were selling more than beer and shots. Complaints were coming in to the local detachment that a bartender and waitress were selling cocaine to clientele. But the uniformed officers had a big problem. It's hard to do an undercover investigation in a marked cruiser while wearing a police uniform. So the local detachment called in Project Street Team, a newly-formed unit of OPP drug enforcement officers who bring their specialized tools and knowledge of drug investigations and combine it with the street knowledge and tips from local officers. The team sent a trained undercover officer into the bar who made several purchases of drugs, leading to the arrest of two people. The bust was just one of several the team has conducted since starting up in September, says Det.-Sgt. Paul Henry of the Ottawa OPP Drug Enforcement Unit. The list of busts range from undercover buys to huge seizures of marijuana operations. With the mandate of providing drug investigation support to the OPP East Region, the team has laid 48 charges to date, seizing $3.3 million in drugs and $60,000 in stolen property. The team provides drug investigation tools and assistance to detachments east of Ottawa in towns and villages like Bourget, Winchester, Kemptville and Hawkesbury. In the past, the Ottawa Drug Enforcement Unit was primarily focused on undercover investigations. But that's changed, says Henry. DIVERSITY "We have evolved into a diversified unit where we join forces with other police agencies and the area uniform members," he says. "We try to respond to the needs of those areas. We will investigate any drug offences and attempt to seize drugs." Without tools like surveillance equipment, undercover officers or unmarked cars, local detachments often had trouble gathering key evidence needed for convictions, says Henry. Without the proper tools to make a bust, information on local drug dealers would sometimes not be used because hopes for a bust were low. Project Street Team can access the equipment needed, including the expert witnesses and investigators needed to take dealers down. The officers also have special expertise in the handling of exhibits for court presentation further ensuring charges will stick. But that expertise is useless without the many tips from local uniformed officers and Crime Stoppers that lead to arrests and charges, says Henry. The team also has training in proceeds of crime investigations making a further dent in drug rings by seizing the assets of organized crime. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens