Pubdate: Wed, 21 Nov 2001 Source: Pawtucket Times (RI) Copyright: 2001 The Pawtucket Times Contact: http://www.pawtuckettimes.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1286 COPS: USE OF COCAINE ON THE RISE PAWTUCKET -- Heroin is still hard at work in the Blackstone Valley, but cocaine is making a comeback. Police report they are seeing cocaine in big and small packages -- all of them with greater frequency than they have seen in recent years. There also has been a noticeable upswing in crimes like carjacking and robbery -- crimes that are often committed by people under the influence of a stimulant like cocaine. "Heroin is still the bread and butter here, but cocaine is definitely on the rise," said Detective Lt. Thomas Campbell, the head of the police Special Squad that investigates vice and drug crime. "We are starting to see it more frequently again." None of that is new to anyone but the rookies on the police force. Cocaine was the drug of choice in the Blackstone Valley for nearly a generation after the 1960s infatuation with heroin ran out of steam in the middle 1970s. For years local drug users went to Providence for heroin and to Pawtucket and Central Falls for cocaine. That changed in the early 1990s. People who imported illegal drugs began carrying heroin grown and produced in Latin America --- a powerful heroin known as Mexican brown. The drug was so pure and cheap that users could snort heroin rather than inject it. That drug fueled a renewed interest in heroin that helped lead to an increase, both nationally and locally, in heroin addiction. Locally, police began to see heroin replace cocaine as the drug sold from apartments and street corners. National experts say heroin use has clearly begun to taper off. Cocaine is coming in to fill the void. There are local signs of the shift. The seizure by a DEA taskforce of 22 kilograms of pure cocaine this month in Pawtucket is more evidence that the market for illegal drugs is shifting once again in the area. Another small sign was a raid Monday by detectives with the Special Squad in which they seized several small bags of crack cocaine from an apartment at 27 Dexter Court. Detectives raided two apartments on Dexter Court at 8 p.m., leaving the neighborhood with several people in custody. They also seized more than $1,000 in cash and 2.6 grams of cocaine divided into eight packets, police allege. Alvin DeJesus, 23, and Demetrio Matos, 31, both of 27 Dexter Court, were arrested at home and charged with possession of cocaine and maintaining a common nuisance. Brian Stanley, 21, of Holland Avenue, was arrested in a neighboring apartment. He was charged with possession of marijuana after police allege they found two small bags of the drugs in his pocket. Police reportedly seized slightly less than $300 from him -- including marked money used by an undercover officer to buy drugs. "We ran into a reinforced door, so it delayed our entry," Campbell said. "When we got into the apartment, the toilet was flushing." All three men arrested were held overnight and will face drug charges in court. DeJesus and Matos will face felony charges in Superior Court. Stanley currently faces misdemeanor charges in District Court. Though the drug sold is changing, the methods of chasing the activity does not, Campbell said. "We've been working with Councilor David Clemente," Campbell said. "We've been getting calls on these apartments, but he has been getting more calls from neighborhood residents and is forwarding them to us. "With either heroin or cocaine, we are dealing with street level dealing, neighborhood nuisances," Campbell said. "I'm sure we'll be back in the Dexter Court area again." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens