Pubdate: Fri, 29 Sep 2006 Source: Asheville Citizen-Times (NC) Copyright: 2006 Asheville Citizen-Times Contact: http://www.citizen-times.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/863 NEW DRUG INITIATIVE HOLDS GREAT PROMISE Despite tough laws, untold tax dollars and law enforcement's best efforts, drug use in Western North Carolina continues to increase. Drugs take a toll on all of society, soaking up resources that might otherwise be used to advance any number of causes. But nowhere do they do more harm than to the neighborhoods drug dealers turn into marketplaces. Poor communities are especially vulnerable to the scourge that drives out business, makes people afraid to be in their own yards and causes many to become the victims of robbery and worse crimes. Cookie Mills told the Citizen-Times that drugs were destroying his childhood neighborhood on Drucker Road. Although he no longer lives there, Mills helped start a neighborhood council two years ago. Community members are now reaching out to drug addicts, and Mills said he's seen a marked improvement in the neighborhood with regard to dealers. Such citizen efforts deserve the highest praise and, as the Drucker Road neighborhood council demonstrates, they can be extremely successful. Wanted: Effective tools While citizen involvement plays an important role, law enforcement also needs more effective tools. A program first tried in High Point deserves consideration as a way to tackle the drug problem in our neighborhoods. Police in High Point spent more than three months investigating about 20 dealers operating in the city's West End neighborhood where crack cocaine was openly sold on the street and in houses, according to a story published Wednesday in the Wall Street Journal. Meanwhile, they cultivated relationships with the "influentials" in the dealers' lives: their grandmothers, mothers and mentors. Once they felt they had ironclad cases, police chief James Fealy invited 12 suspected dealers to a meeting at the police station, with a promise they wouldn't be arrested that night. Using 'influentials' With encouragement from their "influentials," nine showed up, according to the Journal story. First, the suspected dealers met with about 30 clergy, social workers and other community members who confronted them with the harm they were doing, asked them to stop doing it and offered to help them. The suspects slouched in their seats and seemed indifferent, but they were then moved to another room where a gaggle of law-enforcement officials awaited them. On the walls of the room were photos of crack houses that had been the suspects' headquarters and each one was presented with a binder laying out the evidence against him or her. The law enforcement officials gave them an ultimatum: Stop dealing or go to jail. They were threatened with maximum sentences and federal charges, which don't allow for parole. They were warned not to relocate because their names were flagged on statewide law-enforcement computers. An overnight success The West End street drug market closed "overnight" and hasn't reopened in more than two years, Chief Fealy told the Journal. He said he was "shocked" at the success. Using the same strategy, police in the city of about 90,000 say they have since shut down its two other major street drug markets. Police in Winston-Salem, where many officers initially called the program "hug-a-thug," and in Newburgh, N.Y., have used the strategy with success. The National Urban League wants to see the approach replicated nationwide and police departments elsewhere, including Tucson, Ariz., and Providence, R.I., are gearing up to try it. "It's the hottest thing in drug enforcement," said Mark A.R. Kleiman, a University of California, Los Angeles, professor who specializes in illicit drug issues, in the Wall Street Journal story. The program works, in part, because it obtains community cooperation and because it targets suspects who haven't become hardened, violent offenders. Those who have are arrested. The goal of the program isn't to eradicate illicit drug use but to shut down overt drug markets, which drive a significant amount of crime. It's not a magic bullet, but its success suggests that it's a tool worth adding to the drug-fighting arsenal. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman