Pubdate: Fri, 08 Sep 2000
Source: Washington City Paper (DC)
Copyright: 2000 Washington Free Weekly Inc.
Contact:  (202) 332-8500
Mail: 2390 Champlain St. NW, Washington, DC 20009
Website: http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/
Author: Laura Lang
Note: This is part 7 of a 13 part feature edition of this weekly newspaper.

YO, MAN, I'M TRYING TO SCORE SOME BAGGIES

When The City Banned The Sale Of Small Plastic Bags For Holding Crack, The 
Underground Market Didn't Die. It Just Went Deeper Underground.

You can buy many things at Edmond Charles' shoebox of a store at Georgia 
Avenue and Park Road NW: sodas and Hershey bars and canned soup and 
Reynold's Plastic Wrap. Anything you need to cool off on a hot day or stock 
your pantry at home. But there's one thing you definitely can't buy: 
small—we're talking very tiny—plastic bags.

Not that some people don't try. Charles says the previous owner of Kim's 
Grocery may have sold the small bags, to judge from the number of people 
who've come in requesting them in the three months since he's owned the 
store. He always gives them a curt response. "If they ask for small 
zip-lock baggies, I tell them to use the ones over there," says Charles, 
pointing to a shelf stocked with two kinds of bags: pint-sized storage bags 
and the larger quart-sized ones, for stowing leftovers in the freezer.

You might think a new owner wouldn't be so brusque with potential 
customers, nor care what size plastic bags they're shopping for. After all, 
the bags seem harmless enough: Clear, with a tiny, useful plastic zipper at 
the top, they're great for holding jewelry. But drop in a small rock of 
crack cocaine—which police say the small bags are often used to hold—and 
the innocuous item becomes just as illegal as the drug it holds.

Unlike cities such as New York, where glass or plastic vials are the 
containers of choice for crack, users in D.C. tend to favor the small bags, 
according to police who work in the narcotics field. For years, users 
purchased the bags at small mom-and-pop stores just like the one Charles 
owns. Once police and local officials caught on to the underground market, 
however, they banned the sale of bags. Certain tradespeople, like jewelers, 
are exempt from the ban.

But some say the law has only made the secret market a bigger secret.

Charles, for one, isn't selling. Not just because it's illegal, he says, 
but because he doesn't want to attract the sort of customers who might be 
shopping for the tiny bags. "I don't want that type of clientele," says 
Charles, a round man with a full beard who hardly fits in the cramped space 
behind the counter and the bulletproof plastic shield. "We just don't want 
to bother with that stuff."

It used to be that small plastic bags were just small plastic bags, meant 
for holding legal things, like nails or fishing hooks or beads. That was 
back before crack hit town, when drugs like heroin and marijuana were sold 
in brown paper bags or bigger plastic ones.

When crack first showed up on D.C. streets, it was usually packaged in 
vials that likely came from dealers in New York, says Mark Christopher 
Stone, a detective in the Metropolitan Police Department's Major Narcotics 
Branch. Although locals could buy the empty vials from stores that sold 
them for perfumes or scented oils, D.C. customers apparently didn't like 
the containers used by their Big Apple counterparts.

Stone says police still come across the occasional vial, but they're mainly 
used by big-time dealers working in nightclubs. Some pushers use the vials 
for PCP, says Stone. Almost everyone else, including some heroin and 
traditional-dope dealers, uses the bags. They're cheaper, more convenient. 
And unlike glass vials, they don't break if you drop them. It's also simple 
to hide the bags in a hurry. "[They're] easier to consume if you're being 
caught," says Stone. "It would certainly be a little rough to swallow that 
vial you have in your hand."

Small bags, like vials, were initially available only at larger stores or 
markets. Soon, however, small neighborhood-store owners realized they could 
make quick money from selling the bags. So they became a new brand of 
dealer. Instead of stocking the bags on the shelves next to the Doritos and 
Pepsi, they usually kept them behind the counter until someone made a 
special request. To win business from drug dealers with a little flair, 
they also offered the bags in a variety of colors and decorated with all 
kinds of symbols, such as Adam and Eve or the Mitsubishi car logo. Crack 
dealers used the bags to distinguish their products.

In 1995, Eydie Whittington noticed empty bags littering a parking lot near 
her home at Alabama Avenue and 23rd Street SE. "I thought, There's a lot of 
jewelry bags. Who's selling jewelry?" she recalls.

Whittington, the Ward 8 D.C. councilmember at the time, had gathered a 
group of neighborhood kids to act as youth advisers during her tenure on 
the council. They clued her in on the bags. "They were like, 'Ms. 
Whittington, you don't know. Those are for drugs,'" she says.

They also told her that dealers could get them at most neighborhood stores. 
So Whittington decided to go undercover. She traded in her power suit for 
jeans, sneakers, and a baseball cap she wore with the bill facing backward. 
She swaggered a little and went into store after store in search of the 
bags. Joined by staff, police, and some of the kids, she found stores all 
across town that were selling. "They just had a market going on here," she 
says.

Whittington pitched the idea of banning the bags to her council colleagues 
in the summer of 1996. Some argued that the bags served legitimate 
purposes. But in July, they passed an amendment to the existing 
paraphernalia law that outlawed the sale and possession of plastic bags 
measuring 1 inch by 1 inch or smaller. According to the law, individuals 
found guilty of possessing bags, with the intent to use them for drugs, can 
be jailed for 30 days, fined $100, or both. Store owners can lose their 
business license and face penalties of six months in jail, a $1,000 fine, 
or both. There are added penalties for previous convictions and selling to 
minors.

Stone says police officers appreciate the effort. The law, along with their 
follow-up police work, has discouraged some store owners from selling the 
bags. But police and local attorneys are too busy dealing with arrests for 
actual crack sales to deal with a parasitic market, so the new law has 
resulted in few charges, says Stone.

"I've never seen anyone brought in for that," says Ed Shacklee, a 
supervising attorney at the nonprofit legal-defense group D.C. Law Students 
in Court. "I think unless you can show intent, you're not going to be able 
to get anywhere. I don't think you can walk up to anyone in the street with 
a zip-lock and arrest them." To prove intent, cops usually produce a 
certain type of evidence—crack—that obviates any need to prosecute on 
plastic-bag charges.

In other words, Whittington's bill, although well-intentioned, hasn't 
brought the crack market—or the bag market—to a screeching halt. "People 
are always crying out for something, and you do what you can," says Ward 2 
Councilmember Jack Evans, who supported the bill. "I'm not sure how 
effective it was."

Evans staffer John Ralls is a little more blunt. "I always thought it was 
kind of a goofy bill," he says.

Besides, Stone says, crack dealers who can't get their hands on the bags 
will still find some way to peddle their product. He and his colleagues 
have found dealers wrapping rocks of crack in foil or plastic wrap, or 
hiding them in medicine bottles. Some people even store the rocks in 
discarded metal caps from beer bottles. They fold the metal around the rock 
so that it's protected and hidden in case the crackhouse is raided. "With 
crack, anything can be used," says Stone.

When I head out to shop for myself, I don't have much luck finding small 
plastic bags at the store just down the street from Charles' shop—right 
along Georgia Avenue in a part of town police say is usually bustling with 
drug sales. Keykey Bank, an employee at C&J Grocery & Deli, says they don't 
sell the bags at her store and haven't in the two-and-a-half years she's 
worked there.

Down the street, another store owner says he used to sell the small bags 
about three years ago but quit when a police officer told him he was adding 
to the decline of the neighborhood. "I live in this area, and I kinda saw 
that," says the store owner. "If they thought I was contributing to the 
sales of drugs by selling bags, I didn't want to be a part of it."

The store owner, who asks to remain anonymous, says he used to purchase the 
bags in bulk from a wholesale company in Pennsylvania. He could buy a bulk 
bag of 10 packs (each holding 100 small bags) for a couple of dollars, and 
then sell each smaller pack for $5, making about $48 profit for each bulk 
bag. "It's good money," he says. "I do miss the money."

I figure maybe I'm picking the wrong stores, so outside, I ask around. A 
guy who tries to sell me a watch in a red-velvet case says I should just 
keep my eyes open for someone selling them along the street. I wait and 
watch, but I don't see anything. I ask a scruffy-bearded middle-aged man in 
a plaid shirt, who fumbles with his cigarette, if he has any suggestions. 
"You mean like for weed?" he asks. I pause. "The small ones," I say. "Um, 
like for crack."

He gives me a sly look before asking: "You're not out here trying to get 
anyone in trouble, are you?" Bingo. He must have something. I shake my head.

It turns out he's a friendly guy, but terrible at giving directions. He 
leans to ask advice from some friends sitting in a beige four-door car that 
idles next to us. "Oh, I forgot about that place," he says as he stands again.

He suggests a store at 13th Street and Otis Place NW but says I'll have to 
make a special request to the cashier. "You got to kinda pull him aside," 
he says. "Just be cool," he says as I leave.

A few days later, I walk to the recommended corner. There's only one store 
around: the Thirteenth Street Market. It's clean and tidy inside, shelves 
stacked with bread and cereal and other groceries. There's a meat counter 
in the back. I browse a little, but not too much. I'm trying to portray the 
right image: somebody who's in there looking for crack bags. I quietly tell 
the cashier, a thin, middle-aged Asian man, that I need some small plastic 
bags.

He pauses. "No, we don't have that," he says.

"Are you sure?" I ask, trying to play it cool. He shakes his head again.

"Someone told me I could get some here," I say, giving him my best 
conspiratorial look.

He pauses again, then reaches to a shelf above the counter and pulls out a 
thick pack of bags. They look a little big. "Do you have any smaller ones?" 
I ask. He shakes his head side to side. I decide I'll measure later, not 
wanting to break my act. "How much?" They're $5. I nod. He rings them up, 
along with my iced tea, and loads everything into a brown paper bag.

I don't open the bag until I get back to my office. I've committed no 
crime, because I have no plans to use the bags for crack. But I can't fight 
the illicit feeling.

Back in my cubicle, I open the bag and spread the goods out on my desk, a 
stack of simple, shiny bags. They would be ideal for sandwiches for very 
tiny people. I use a ruler to measure the bags. They're small, but still 2 
inches by 2 inches, which is, technically, too big to be illegal. Shoot. I 
count the booty: 49 sets of two, for a total of 98—two shy of what I 
assumed would be a pack's worth.

On the other hand, that gives me an entirely different reason to call in 
the fuzz: I got ripped off. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake