Pubdate: Fri, 24 Aug 2001 Source: Seattle Post-Intelligencer (WA) Website: http://www.seattle-pi.com/ Address: P.O. Box 1909, Seattle, WA 98111-1909 Contact: 2001 Seattle Post-Intelligencer Author: Lewis Kamb SHERIFF'S NEW DRUG-WAR STRATEGY DRAWS CONTROVERSY The plan is simple: Target street-level pushers instead of major distributors to appease citizens frustrated by brazen neighborhood drug deals. It's a shift in philosophy in how King County narcotics detectives will fight the drug war, starting next year. "It's pretty obvious that the war on drugs doesn't work, and it won't the way it has been fought," said Sgt. John Urquhart, Sheriff's Office spokesman. "We feel we can make a bigger dent on the drug problem in neighborhoods by refocusing our efforts there rather than at the big-time drug dealer." But Sheriff Dave Reichert's plan to decentralize his agency's Drug Enforcement Unit -- shifting narcotics detectives to local precincts - -- doesn't come without its detractors, both inside and out. Some narcotics officers don't like the idea, saying it will have little impact on what's already being done to thwart local drug sales. It will add only one or two officers per precinct to help patrol deputies make drug busts, they said. "I'm not sure what one more body is going to do to stop the local dealer," said one detective, who asked not to be named. "Right now, we target the mid- and upper-level drug dealers that supply these little local dealers." Outside skeptics include a King County councilman and a member of the Seattle Human Rights Commission. They contend the new drug-enforcement strategy will unfairly target the urban poor, who tend to be people of color, filling up jails and building resentment in minority communities. "It's an extremely biased public policy that will have very little impact on the supply-and-demand side of drugs," warned Councilman Larry Gossett. Small-time drug peddlers are typically the ones who get caught, Gossett said, because they're easiest to catch. They tend to sell drugs out in public in low-income neighborhoods, becoming easy targets for police, he said. "If you look at who's in jail in this country for possessing and selling drugs, it's the small-time sellers who are African Americans and Latinos," Gossett said. "This policy will only further that." "That's simply not true," countered Urquhart. "We're targeting drug dealers, not minorities." There's little doubt that the war on drugs has taken a disproportionate toll on blacks and other minorities in the Puget Sound region and across the nation. A six-month Harvard University study released in May found that more than half of those arrested in 1999 for drug crimes in Seattle were black, although African Americans make up about 8 percent of the city's population. Researchers suggested the disparity exists because Seattle police emphasize curbing low-level drug sales in open-air markets downtown rather than in outlying neighborhoods. They also concluded that police focus more on catching small-time sellers who are predominately minorities, rather than on predominantly white buyers. Seattle police statistics don't translate to the King County Sheriff's Office, Urquhart said. One reason is that the largely unincorporated area the Sheriff's Office patrols has a much smaller minority population, he said. Also, the county's local-level drug problems mainly involve dealers selling out of apartments and houses, not in open-air markets or on the street. "What people complain about are the guys in their apartment building selling 'rock' (cocaine), not the guy selling a kilo or more," said Urquhart, a former narcotics detective. "We have a responsibility to the people who are paying our salaries, and they're telling us to go after the neighborhood drug problem." That may be true, but Gossett said weeding out small-time dealers "doesn't make a dent in the overall problem, because they'll easily be replaced by the guy a block over." Tony Granillo, a member of the Seattle Human Rights Commission, agreed. "The result will be more arrests of low-level suppliers, predominately minority and lower income, with little net reduction in the supply of drugs on the street." Concentrating on small-scale drug busts is "ineffective," said David Leven, deputy director of The Lindesmith Center-Drug Policy Foundation, a New York-based drug-policy research group. Local law enforcement should focus instead on getting dealers and users into treatment programs "that reduce demand, and therefore reduce street sales," he said. "From a practical standpoint, it doesn't make any sense," Leven said. "So are we just supposed to ignore the guy selling rock in the neighborhood?" asked Urquhart. "I don't think so." Judy Duff, a longtime resident of North Highline and president of the North Highline Unincorporated Area Council, said her neighborhood south of Seattle has been devastated by drugs and needs help. "It's a very unpleasant place to be when you've got children living next door to a doggone meth house," she said. Duff had only heard bits and pieces of the sheriff's plan. "I don't know if this will be the answer or not," she said. "But my concern has always been the same. We need help and we need it now. We can't afford to fool around anymore." For years, the Drug Enforcement Unit has targeted major drug suppliers. Nine detectives and two sergeants now operate in one centralized team based out of the Regional Justice Center in Kent. In precincts, patrol deputies respond to reports of neighborhood drug crimes and arrest street pushers. Under Reichert's plan, set to take effect in January, one or two members of the unit will stay in Kent, two will be shifted to regional drug task forces and the remaining detectives will be divided between three precincts, Urquhart said. The Sheriff's Office will leave the task of catching big-time dealers to a host of other agencies, such as the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, the Washington State Patrol and several task forces. Drug Enforcement Unit members will continue to do many of the same duties, including responding to meth lab discoveries, which occur about three times a week. The bulk of King County's neighborhood drug trade centers in Precinct Four -- a largely urban area south of Seattle that includes the cities of Burien and SeaTac, and unincorporated neighborhoods, such as Top Hat and Boulevard Park. Methamphetamine has eclipsed cocaine and heroin as the most prolific illicit drug sold in the county in recent years, although all three continue to be sold frequently from homes and apartments at neighborhood levels, Urquhart said. It's the constant traffic to and from these drug houses, along with peripheral crimes that crop up near them, such as prostitution, that define King County's localized drug problems. That has led to "neighborhood devastation," more citizen complaints and, ultimately, the change in the sheriff's approach, Urquhart said. King County Executive Ron Sims supports Reichert's plan and is "confident" it will be successful, spokeswoman Elaine Kraft said. The plan was formed after a six-month internal review of how to better fight the drug trade and serve citizens, Urquhart said. Although the Sheriff's Office faces more budget cuts this year, the change in philosophy is not a budget issue, he insisted. "Of course, not everybody wants to make the change," Urquhart said. "Some of these guys have been in that unit 15 years or more. But this is what the sheriff decided, so that's what we're going to do." P-I reporter Mike Lewis contributed to this report. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens