Pubdate: Wed, 21 Oct 2009
Source: Ledger-Enquirer (Columbus,GA)
Copyright: 2009 Ledger-Enquirer
Contact:  http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/enquirer/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/237
Author: Annie McCallum, and Alan Riquelmy

RED RIBBON WEEK:  RURAL AREAS NOT IMMUNE TO DRUG ACTIVITY

Red Ribbon Week: Rural areas not immune to drug activity Harris, 
Troup, Russell, Lee counties use informats, stings to combat drugs

By ANNIE McCALLUM and ALAN RIQUELMY -  This week, the Ledger-Enquirer has been examining drug-related 
problems in the Chattahoochee Valley, including crime, and what's 
being done to combat these problems. Today, we look outside the 
valley's largest city, Columbus, at neighboring rural areas. Which 
drugs are most prevalent? How is law enforcement approaching the problem?

Harris County

"We're like most rural counties," said Harris County Sheriff Mike 
Jolley. "If you're looking for drugs you can find it. You can find it 
in Harris like any other county in America."

Still, Jolley said his county, which has a growing population of 
about 30,000, doesn't have the same issues as neighboring Muscogee 
County, and its meth traffic is not as prevalent as in some rural areas.

"We work on our drug problem in Harris County," he said. "We used to 
be very rural. Now we're more a bedroom community. We don't have the 
meth problem you'll see in rural counties."

The Harris County Sheriff's Office takes proactive measures to work 
on drug activity, Jolley said. For example, law enforcement works 
with students on drug awareness and prevention and Jolley's office 
works closely with citizens who report issues. Jolley said once 
problems are identified his staff works the county aggressively.

Capt. James Price, who works in Jolley's office, said when officers 
are investigating drug activity they frequently use informants or 
undercover officers to make drug buys. The drugs they tend to see 
include crack, methamphetamine and marijuana.

Price said those people who work as informants tend to come to the 
police. They are often in trouble and know what information police 
could find valuable, he said. Eventually police can build up 
information and make arrests, slowly taking away dealers' customers.

"The only way you can curb it is to stop suppliers," Price said. 
"That is really hard for a department like us."

Without being able to control the drug trade completely, inevitably 
crime can be linked to drug use.

"Just about all your crimes come from drug activity," Price said. 
"From robberies to burglaries, it's to supply the habit of a user. 
Just about all our burglaries have some direct connect to someone who 
has addiction."

Troup County

In neighboring Troup County, Capt. William Grizzard said he also sees 
the strong link between burglaries and drugs.

"They steal things for and shoplift to trade it for drugs," he said, 
adding he's seen drug users break into homes and steal a microwave 
and TV to trade for drugs.

Grizzard said he encourages families and friends of drug users to 
step in and ask for help. He said users will steal from their family 
and friends and then eventually steal from strangers and businesses 
to fuel their addiction.

The Troup County Sheriff's Department tends to see crack cocaine and 
meth. Similar to Harris County, Troup law enforcement officials also 
try and combat the problem by making street-level buys. They also 
rely on Crime Stoppers for assistance.

However, Troup being to the north of Harris County puts it a bit 
closer to the state's capital. The primarily rural county, which also 
sits on the Georgia-Alabama border, is home to about 63,000 people 
and is only about 60 miles from Atlanta. Grizzard said the county's 
close proximity to Atlanta makes drug activity an issue.

"It's just so easy to get," he said. "That's one of the problems we 
have being so close."

Russell County

In Russell County, like in more urban spots, there are areas where 
drug cases are made repeatedly, said Lt. Heath Taylor with the 
Russell County Sheriff's Office.

"We'll get that all the way through the county, from Hurtsboro to 
Cottonton," Taylor said.

Authorities have several methods of dealing with the drug problem. 
There's a metro drug unit, which covers the whole county and deals 
with larger scale and longer term drug operations. There's also a 
street-level narcotics patrol that handles the high risk spots, Taylor said.

It's two different missions and two different ways of dealing with the problem.

Taylor's office also uses its Web site, rcso.org, to get anonymous 
tips. He says he gets three to five each week, and his office checks 
on each one.

The drugs he sees are the same as in the city ­ marijuana, meth, 
crack and cocaine. Having more rural areas in their jurisdiction 
doesn't mean they have less drugs, he said. Taylor said his county 
has no worse problem than any other.

And being in the "country" doesn't necessarily make it more difficult 
to catch those in the drug trade, Taylor said. When people see 
vehicles pull up to a certain residence at all hours and stay for 
only a matter of minutes, that's a clue to most anyone.

"You've still got to have traffic," Taylor said of a drug house. 
"People call all the time with that one piece of information."

Lee County

Capt. Van Jackson with the Lee County Sheriff's Office has many of 
the same challenges as Taylor's office. Jackson has seen people move 
to more rural areas for the sole purpose of making meth.

The odors produced while making the drug are pungent, and some of its 
makers prefer getting away from a city to avoid identification.

Jackson said his office has an aggressive approach to catching drug 
pedlars. Deputies are trained in identifying drug users and sellers, 
and they in turn speak to civil groups and others, teaching them the 
same techniques.

There are investigators who focus on drug crimes and Jackson's office 
partners with Auburn and Opelika in its drug enforcement efforts.

In addition, the sheriff's office has school resource officers whose 
jobs are teaching drug abstinence and identifying drug use.

"We all work proactively to combat those crimes," Jackson said. 
"We're going to find new avenues where we can do more."

The drugs in Lee County are the same found in Russell County, with 
marijuana and meth being two of the most common, Jackson said. From 
time to time, people are caught with an amount of drugs that is the 
legal definition of trafficking. Interstates are used to move drugs 
and Interstate 85 goes right through Lee County.

However, deputies have training to find people who may be trafficking 
in drugs and Alabama State Troopers have made cases over the years, 
Jackson said.

"I think that success is happening," the captain said.
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