Pubdate: Wed, 07 Aug 2002
Source: Big Sandy News, The (KY)
Copyright: 2002 The Big Sandy News
Contact:  http://www.bigsandynews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1975
Author: Scott Perry

SMILING FACES DON'T ALWAYS TELL THE TRUTH

It appears from all the signs that a cooperative effort to address drug 
trafficking concerns between Paintsville police and the Johnson County 
Sheriff's department is in a deep coma from which it is unlikely to 
recover. Though we are being told that problems are being worked out, the 
truth is that they are not and the animosity between the agencies is growing.

Officials can put on their smiling faces in public if they want, but that 
doesn't stop the grumbling we hear behind the scenes. Nor does it repair 
the damage done. And, they aren't mending any fences, obviously (see 
letters to the editor), when they let the rank and file pull nails as 
quickly as they are driven.

The impending collapse of the Paintsville-Johnson County Drug Task Force is 
clearly the result of personality conflicts and not the actual 
effectiveness of the project which, as we have detailed in a variety of 
news accounts, was quite positive. What a shame that grownups can't put 
their egos aside for the benefit of the masses.

This isn't the first time such a beneficial and logical co-op among police 
has run into a dead end. A few years back, a similar but much broader 
consortium of law enforcement agencies went gunning for street-level 
dopers, making a sizable dent in the illicit trade in several Eastern 
Kentucky counties and communities.

The Mountain Area Drug Task Force was working fairly well when it ran 
aground. It too was the victim of misplaced egoism, though the death blow 
was dealt through allegations, petty allegations, of mismanagement.

Maybe there's something in the water around here that keeps our police 
agencies at arms length from one another. Certainly we'd rather pin our 
difficulties on a virus than come to terms with the possibility that we've 
got some very immature people carrying guns and badges. Ah, but the reality 
comes like a slap in the face.

We've heard police officers from various agencies gripe more about the 
publicity their peers attract in the drug wars than they talk about the 
dangers of or solutions to our problems with drugs. Rather than applaud 
successes, by whoever, some officers and agencies just can't seem to 
control their green-eyed envy over who is and who isn't getting front-page 
notice. Rather than communicate their own department efforts with the 
media, some agencies just clam up, thinking they are punishing us by going 
incommunicado. We said this before, we'll say it again...

This newspaper does not play favorites in news coverage. If one agency 
appears to get more ink than another it is because that agency invites us 
along when it makes a bust or it communicates with us regularly about its 
activities.

Because we cover news in five counties we must weigh the news value of 
every picture we take and every story we write. The most significant make 
the front page. We have news bureaus in Louisa, Inez, Paintsville, 
Prestonsburg and will open soon in Salyersville. This paper strongly 
supports law and order efforts throughout the Big Sandy region, and our 
thousands of readers want to be kept informed about the efforts to reduce 
all crime.

Right now, many of those readers would like to know why successful, 
effective projects are being shelved and why some of our police agencies 
are more concerned with who is getting publicity than how effective we are 
in the attack on crime.

Right now, many of our readers would prefer that our police agencies bury 
the hatchets...somewhere other than in one another's backs...and get on 
with the business of making their communities, counties and region safer 
places to live, work and raise kids. In our book, fighting crime isn't 
about who gets noticed, but what gets done.

Failure isn't an option any of us wish to publicize.

- --Scott Perry
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MAP posted-by: Alex