Pubdate: Sun, 28 May 2000 Source: Sunday Mail (Australia) Copyright: News Limited 2000 Contact: http://toolchest.news.com.au/feedback/ Website: http://www.news.com.au/ http://www.thesundaymail.com.au/ POLICE GET OK TO SELL DRUGS Undercover police will be allowed to sell and supply drugs under new state laws. While Police Minister Tom Barton says officers will be pulled out of operations if they use drugs, new laws being introduced will allow them to sell narcotics. Mr Barton says covert police should not have to use drugs and they will be regularly drug-tested during operations. However, several former covert agents have told The Sunday Mail they regularly had to use drugs to maintain their cover and gain the confidence of targets. They said they also bought, sold and supplied drugs while working undercover. Fifteen former covert police operatives who claim to have suffered as a result of undercover work are suing the State Government for negligence causing personal injury. They have filed individual Supreme Court writs and most claim they were sent into operations without adequate warning that they could be exposed to psychological and physical stresses. Some of the former police, who served undercover between the late 1980s and mid-'90s, claim they were put at risk of injury or death because of unsafe working conditions. Other former covert officers are also consulting lawyers about possible lawsuits against the government. Several former agents who spoke to The Sunday Mail said they developed drug and alcohol problems while working undercover. They say their years in covert work ruined their lives and careers. Some still have severe depression years later and they have been unable to maintain relationships or hold down full-time jobs. They say they were inadequately prepared for months of living under false identities within the drug scene. And when they came out of covert work they had no retraining to reintroduce them to mainstream policing. Former undercover cop Tyron Mangakahia said some agents posing as buyers or dealers had sold drugs because it would have seemed highly unusual if they refused to sell to targets who knew they had supplies. And he said agents sometimes paid informants with drugs when there was no money available. One former officer said his controller once suggested he sell cocaine as part of an operation and another said he sold speed and marijuana and supplied small amounts of heroin. Mr Barton said covert police might have to sell or supply drugs to track drug networks back to the organisers and financiers of major operations. Under new laws, a committee headed by a retired judge will give approval for necessary lawbreaking during operations. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson