Pubdate: Thu, 12 Jun 2008
Source: Dayton Daily News (OH)
Copyright: 2008 Dayton Daily News
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/Oq6vF5LO
Website: http://www.daytondailynews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/120
Author: Lucas Sullivan

POLICE: AREA RIFE WITH DRUG ACTIVITY

A Dayton Man Was Killed In The 2100 Block After A Police Sting Went Wrong.

DAYTON - When looking for drug activity in the 2100  block of Edwin 
C. Moses Boulevard, police pay attention  to the little things.

It could be a car bearing out-of-county plates in the  back of a 
parking lot, vehicles circling around  businesses multiple times, or 
someone in the front seat  looking down, perhaps working up a fix.

Buyers often use the pay phone outside of the Econo  Lodge or a cell 
phone to contact a nearby dealer,  according to police.

Some of the deals take place on nearby Cincinnati  Street and the 
buyer returns to the 2100 block, usually  the Wendy's or McDonald's 
parking lots, to use, police  reports say.

"If you are from out of town you aren't going to  venture too far 
into the city," Dayton police Maj.  Mitch Davis said. "And that's the 
way they came in so  it's a logical place to stop before getting back 
on the  highway."

Carl Carter Sr. and Bobbie Carter, of Lynchburg,  stopped in the 
McDonald's parking lot on a dark, cold  mid-January evening.

According to a police report, Bobbie Carter told  detectives she had 
just sold some of her blood for $40  and the couple used $20 to buy 
two heroin gel caps at a  house on Liscum Drive.

Police noticed the couple in the Wendy's parking lot,  far away from 
the restaurant's nearest entrance, bent  over and looking toward the 
car's console.

They were drawing heroin out of the caps with a needle  and syringe, 
according to the report. The two were  arrested for possession of narcotics.

Most drug arrests are in the evening

Many drug-related arrests in the 2100 block occur after  5 p.m., 
according to police reports.

In the morning, it's normal to see academics, repairmen  and soccer 
moms stopping for breakfast at McDonald's or  catching a caffeine 
buzz at the BP.

"I fill up here a lot in the morning," said Doug  Taylor, while 
pumping gas at the BP. "I've never seen anything  suspicious going 
on. It's not going to stop me because  it is the only BP around here 
and I have to use a (BP  gas) card for work."

"I stop here because it is close to my work," said  Shantae Jones, 
after ordering lunch at Wendy's. "It  looks like a nice area. But 
drug dealers? That's crazy.  I might need to go somewhere else, but 
this stuff is  everywhere."

Police Sgt. Chris Williams, who has participated in  drug busts in 
the 2100 block, said, "You will find that  a lot of the arrests from 
that area are people who are  from out of town."

Williams said there is little the businesses can do to  stem drug 
trafficking by out-of-towners. The businesses  are located there in 
part to draw people from the  highway.

The BP, Wendy's and McDonald's are open late and the  Econo Lodge 
usually has vacancies, though employees  lock the lobby doors from 
midnight to 7 a.m.

The hotel's manager, who declined to give his name,  said a customer 
must produce a valid driver's license  before he or she can rent a room.

The McDonald's and Wendy's are both corporate-owned,  according to 
the Montgomery County Auditor's Web site.  Calls to their corporate 
headquarters were not  returned.

A manager at the BP gas station declined to be  interviewed.

Drug sting goes awry, resulting in man's death

After weeks of undercover surveillance, Dayton detectives were hoping 
to arrest alleged drug dealer Robert A. Moore, 19, on May 15 after a 
controlled drug buy in the Econo Lodge parking lot.

The sting quickly spiraled into a fatal shooting.

After the alleged drug buy, detectives approached the  car, whose 
driver, Charles D. Stargell Jr., 24, refused  to surrender, Dayton 
police Chief Richard Biehl said.

Stargell hit detectives David House and Raymond St.  Clair with the 
car, causing St. Clair to accidently  fire his weapon into the car's 
rear window.

House then fired into the car, hitting 22-year-old  passenger Derrick 
J. Jordan, of Dayton, in the head,  Biehl said.

As Stargell tried to make it back onto Edwin C. Moses  Boulevard, 
someone in the car tossed a gun out the  window, Biehl said.

The car didn't make it out of the parking lot.

Jordan never made it out of Miami Valley Hospital. He  died 15 days 
after being shot.

Jordan was cleared of any criminal charges from the incident.

"He was in the wrong place at the wrong time," said  Marvin Jordan, 
Derrick's uncle. "He was a good kid. He  had no record and actually 
had a job interview at  General Motors that following Monday."

Stargell was indicted on three counts of felonious  assault, two 
counts of failure to comply and one count  of complicity to drug trafficking.

Moore is charged with felony cocaine trafficking.

The detectives involved in the shooting have returned  to work.

House arrested a couple from Miamisburg on June 6 for  trying to use 
heroin in the Wendy's parking lot,  according to a police report.
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