Pubdate: Mon, 03 Jan 2000 Source: News & Observer (NC) Copyright: 2000 The News and Observer Publishing Company Contact: The People's Forum, P.O. Box 191, Raleigh, N.C. 27602 Fax: (919)829-4872 Website: http://www.news-observer.com/ Author: Lorenzo Perez, Staff Writer DRUG CRACKDOWNS STING STORE OWNERS Some vendors feel they are made scapegoats RALEIGH -- Joe Jabir stopped selling the short plastic tubes some customers used as crack pipes. He also stopped stocking, at the request of Alcohol Law Enforcement agents, the small plastic bags favored by drug dealers. After a year of scrutiny from ALE agents, Jabir and other convenience-store owners in Southeast Raleigh remain targets for neighborhood critics. The drug dealers and drunks seeking malt liquor and fortified wine outnumber the customers shopping for milk and diapers at these corner stores, critics say. After complaints from some community activists reached the General Assembly, ALE assigned an agent to work solely in Raleigh's redevelopment area, which stretches from Blount and Hoke streets to New Bern Avenue. A year has passed since ALE began staging sting operations in and around some of the 40 businesses licensed to sell beer and wine in the redevelopment area. With the cooperation of Raleigh police and Wake County Alcohol Beverage Control, ALE agents have arrested 130 people on a variety of alcohol- and drug-related charges during the past 12 months. Jabir applauds the efforts but said he is tired of store owners being scapegoats for a community problem. " First of all, the store is not causing the problems," Jabir said Friday morning, watching a delivery man unload a truckload of soft drinks for his Bragg Street store. "We don't like to see the hanging-around outside, the selling of alcohol to minors, because we're the ones who lose our licenses, our permits." Most ALE agents cover several counties and may be responsible for as many as 225 alcohol-selling establishments. Since December 1998, Agent Ken Pike - -- before his transfer to a supervisory position -- and Agent John Adorjan have worked exclusively in Southeast Raleigh. At least in terms of arrests and alcohol-license violations, the smaller caseload has paid off for them. "I don't want to say the traditional mode didn't work, but this way sure works a lot better," Adorjan said. At the first "Cops in Shops" sting operation in March, undercover agents and Raleigh police officers posing as store clerks and customers arrested 76 people. Of the 103 criminal charges filed, 22 were felony drug charges. "The drug activity was so rampant that our agents could barely get out of their car before they were approached by several people selling crack," Pike said. The ABC Commission has stripped the ABC permits of three Southeast Raleigh stores since last January. At one of them -- Watson's Mini Mart at 402 E. Bragg St. -- owner William Watson was charged with selling crack cocaine inside his store, according to ALE records. The arrests have cast a much-needed spotlight on the "economic violence" created by some convenience stores, said Octavia Rainey, chairwoman of the North Central Citizens Advisory Council. "ALE has created more awareness of everything that the inner-city neighborhoods have been saying about these stores," she said. "ALE has proved it, what we have been living through." Employees of Wee Bob Mini Mart at 810 Rock Quarry Road used to stock rocks of crack cocaine on the grocery shelf in front of the cash register, ALE records show. When undercover agents went in to the store July 15 to buy crack from an employee, according to the ALE report, a store clerk had to tell the huddle of people there to buy drugs he would get to them one at a time. Four Wee Bob employees were arrested on drug charges, and the store's ABC permit was suspended for 80 days. Ouida Exum, co-owner of the store, said she had noticed crowds of people hanging out in her store and had reported to police her suspicions that some of her employees were involved in drugs. "It was very difficult, very devastating," she said about the 80-day permit suspension. "But I can't say in all fairness they were unfair to us." Other stores got in trouble for selling stolen property, usually cartons of cigarettes and stereo equipment. The Quick Stop at 1130 Garner Road lost its ABC license in July after undercover agents arranged to sell the owner 15 stolen cases of Enfamil infant formula. During that undercover operation, part of a larger investigation by the Raleigh Police Department, 13 stores within the redevelopment area knowingly bought stolen goods. Raleigh Police Capt. Mike Longmire said that even the stores that did not accept stolen goods share some blame. "I don't buy into the excuses of the store owners who want to pass the blame," he said. "All I can say is, in those cases where store owners did not purchase stolen property from us, none of them called 911 as a good citizen to report it." ALE agents say that progress has been made in their cleanup effort. They point to the percentage of stores in Southeast Raleigh cited for selling alcohol to minors. Only four stores, or 16 percent of the stores targeted in an undercover operation, sold alcohol to a minor. Statewide, according to ALE, the percentage of stores caught selling to minors was 26 percent. Recent sting operations have netted far fewer arrests. Last month, 28 people were arrested on a variety of drug and alcohol charges. On Jan. 25, convenience store owners will meet with Rainey and other neighborhood residents, the second meeting organized by ALE. Resentment on both sides remains, however. At the first meeting, in November, several store owners said that parts of the black communities they serve are prejudiced against store owners who immigrated from the Middle East. "There are people in the community who think we are a bunch of dumb foreigners," Jabir said Friday. "I cannot stand it. But I also have neighbors who are excellent to us. I have over 200 signatures from the neighborhood saying they need me to stay here." Another sore point for some store owners is a state law passed last year that gives the Alcoholic Beverage Commission the authority to suspend or revoke the ABC permits of stores where alcohol accounts for more than half of the stores' total sales. James Nwizu, the owner of Sahara Mini Mart on South State Street, said he can't wait until a store owner is cited for violating the 50 percent law. "They can make laws, but it's another thing for people to challenge the law," said Nwizu, who had his ABC permit suspended for five days in May after a store employee was arrested for selling two $10 bags of marijuana to undercover agents. "Why are you going to punish somebody for selling legal items?" Nwizu asked. "It's not against the law to sell malt liquor. That [50 percent] law is going to be challenged." What remains undetermined is how long ALE will continue devoting an agent to the city's redevelopment area. Although the sting operations have caught everyone's attention, Rainey said that to follow through, the ABC Commission could be doing more. "When they fine someone $1,200 and suspend their license five days, to me, that's a smack on the hand. When you give them a three-month suspension, they know they can't sell beer and wine and can't make a profit," she said. "Then they take it seriously." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake