Pubdate: Sun, 27 Aug 2006
Source: Naples Daily News (FL)
Copyright: 2006 Naples Daily News.
Contact:  http://www.naplesnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/284
Note: Note: Publisher prints several newspapers - please indicate which 
newspaper in LTEs.
Author: Nicholas P. Alajakis

DEPUTIES INCREASE STINGS TO COMBAT CRIME

One week it's prostitutes. The next week it's underage drinking. Week three 
might see burglars or drug dealers.

With an increased force and a new transport van, Lee County sheriff's 
deputies in Bonita Springs are making arrests and handing out citations by 
the handful by increasing the amount of undercover stings in the city.

In the past two months, there have been stings for prostitution, vehicle 
insurance, selling alcohol to minors and drug dealing. In each case a 
handful of people were arrested or cited.

"We are going to focus our attention somewhere anytime there is a problem," 
Bonita community policing Lt. Morgan Bowden said. "There is something 
planned on a weekly basis to address the problems that come up."

Bonita Springs is unique in that approach, because of the resources the 
city puts toward law enforcement, Bowden said.

In addition to contracting Bonita-specific deputies, the city also helped 
buy a transport wagon that can take up to nine prisoners to the Lee County 
jail in Fort Myers for processing.

"It all shows that we're being tough on crime," Bonita Springs Mayor Jay 
Arend said. "We were concerned with problems on Old 41 and we told (the 
Sheriff's Office) to pay attention to that area."

What the Sheriff's Office found was a large amount of small problems that 
were affecting the quality of life, Bowden said.

The increase in undercover stings, coupled with reports from the City 
Council and Bonita Springs Code Enforcement, helps identify some of those 
issues, he added.

If done consistently, the influx of stings can do a lot to help clean an 
area, Bonita Councilman Richard Ferreira said.

Ferreira, a former police captain in Rhode Island, said that putting extra 
attention on what are essentially victimless crimes helps in the long run, 
because larger crimes don't follow.

"When you concentrate your patrols on prostitutes and drugs, you lessen the 
opportunity for those things to get into the whole community," Ferreira said.

The stings are scheduled to continue for the foreseeable future, Bowden said.

"I'm very pleased with the results of the stings, and I'm glad that they're 
going after what seemingly isn't that important," Ferreira said.
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D