Pubdate: Fri, 25 Feb 2000 Source: Herald, The (UK) Contact: http://www.theherald.co.uk/ Author: James Freeman VITAL ROLE IN DRUGS BATTLE The first director of the innovative Scottish Drugs Enforcement Agency will be named today by the Scottish Executive as Mr Jim Orr, the 51-year-old career detective who currently heads up all crime operations in Strathclyde Police. Mr Orr, an assistant chief constable in the force led by his elder brother, Chief Constable John Orr, will move to the DEA on a three-year secondment with the rank of deputy chief constable and a salary in excess of UKP80,000. He was one of three candidates, two from England, for what may well be the toughest job in UK policing. Public and political expectation will be high because the Scottish Executive has moved swiftly to firm up what began life as a vague pre-election promise, but which has quickly become a central plank of the anti-drugs strategy. With recent statistics showing a rising graph of drug abuse, drug seizures and drug-related deaths despite the enormous efforts of the authorities, the stakes could not be higher. An indication of the high-powered nature of the job may be gathered from the personnel on the selection panel - Mr Colin Baxter, head of the Police Division at the Scottish Office Home Department, Chief Constable John Hamilton of Fife, representing the Association of Chief Police Officers in Scotland (ACPOS), Mr John Abbot, director-general of the National Criminal Intelligence Service, Mr Sandy Cameron, chairman of the Scottish Drug Action Teams and Councillor Lesley Hinds, convener of Lothian and Borders Police Board. Mr Orr began his police career as a cadet with Ayrshire Constabulary and went on to become largely involved in CID, but with much time spent in Special Branch. He is an internationally-known figure in the intelligence community, a standing which will be vital in the new agency. Senior sources believe all his diplomatic skills will be required to first of all bring on side all the Scottish forces - particularly the drug squads - and then to line everyone up in a concerted effort to hit the major drug importers. The chain of command will run from the Deputy Minister for Justice Angus McKay, through the Drug Enforcement Forum to the chairman of the Crime Committee of ACPOS. Ironically, the incumbent is non other than Mr John Orr, to who Mr Jim Orr will report in the first instance. Much of the SDEA's role will revolve around co-ordinating local, national and international intelligence and translating it into direct action on the ground across Scotland using every available resource. Mr McKay is likely today to caution against expectations of overnight success. When the agency was announced in December, the UK director of the NCIS, Mr Vince Harvey, said Scotland was now leading the way in drug enforcement in the UK. He acknowledged we already had a far better record of co-ordination between the agencies, saying that scotland was now building on that to create a first in the UK. He hoped England and Wales would look at the SDEA as a role model. More controversially, the UKP10.8m funding which will cover the first three years of the SDEA's existence, initially buying 200 extra officers for drug squads across Scotland to give the agency teeth, came from savings accumulated by the Scottish Prison Service to fund future pay rises and improvements. The Scottish Executive, however, now regards justice funding as one pot. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson