Pubdate: Thu, 06 Dec 2001 Source: Daily Astorian, The (OR) Copyright: 2001 The Daily Astorian Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1629 Author: Tom Bennett COUPLE JOINS FIGHT AGAINST DRUG CULTURE Three Officers Trace Flow Of Drugs In County Bill and Carol thought Astoria looked like the perfect small-town environment to raise their children. But when a new acquaintance of Ken's asked if he'd like to get ahold of some pot - or cocaine or heroin, if he liked - and began introducing him to others who made similar offers, the couple began having second thoughts about the "little piece of heaven" where they'd made their new home. The two went to the police - but not just to report the offer of drugs. They offered their services as undercover buyers for the Clatsop County Interagency Narcotics Task Force. Posing as drug users, the husband and wife, together and separately, made a dozen purchases for the task force, part of a sting operation that resulted in the arrests of 16 people last month and the seizure of thousands of dollars worth of marijuana, cocaine, heroin, mushrooms and prescription medications. The two had never done anything like it before, but they said the flagrant drug trafficking they saw, and the many children they saw involved in it, prompted them to take a direct role in catching at least some of the people involved in the local drug trade. Their work with the task force completed, "Bill" and "Carol" - not their real names - have left Astoria for good, saying the things they witnessed during their brief stint as undercover buyers has soured them on the community. "We thought this was a little piece of heaven out here. We felt this would be a great environment for us and our kids - a small, close-knit community," Bill said. Within two weeks of moving to town early this fall, Bill, a former professional baseball player, met a person who knew of his career. One day Bill gave the man a ride to his apartment, and on walking in saw people inside buying and selling a variety of drugs. One man said he could sell Bill the drug in rock or powder form. "My first question was what kind of quantities, and he said 'depends on how much money you have and how much you want,'" he said. The experience, he said, drove him to contact the police. "What angered me, pushed me in this direction was, in this particular apartment complex, it wasn't just adults. I was seeing junior high kids in there, buying and smoking marijuana. There was mushrooms, heroin, crank - I called it a buffet of madness." From that first encounter, Bill was introduced to more people who said they would be able to provide him with drugs - any type of drugs - and many became targets in the task force sting. Bill, and later Carol, began contacting sellers and, with cash provided by the task force, made drug purchases ranging from $20 to $3,000. The buys all took place in and near Astoria. What shocked the pair was not just the quantity of drugs but the variety available from so many local different sources. "I've been all over the world and in big cities, and I have never seen the kind of concentration, such a large amount of different dope all in one place," Bill said. "After getting together with the task force and researching and investigating further, I realized this covered all four corners of the county. People would come from Seaside to deliver, people would come from Clatskanie to deliver, and here in Astoria there were more than enough individuals - there was never a day that went by where I couldn't purchase cocaine." If one dealer didn't have a particular drug, he or she knew another person who could deliver it, he said. He learned of at least 10 individuals who could supply heroin, and twice that many dealing cocaine. A dozen could sell him marijuana. But what most disturbed the couple was the many children they saw who are part of the drug culture. "I'm glad I saw the epidemic in this town before my own kids got to that age," Bill said. Children "that age" are already getting involved, according to what the couple saw. They spoke of seeing middle-school-age childern at many of the homes buying and smoking marijuana, while younger children and toddlers were in the room or nearby while transactions took place. One of their children said his friend's 13-year-old brother was buying marijuana from his uncle, Carol said, and at one residence Bill bought drugs from a young woman who babysat for another of his son's classmates. "I doesn't matter the age of the kids. If they have five bucks, these people are going to sell them some dope," Carol said. Once they became familiar to many of the local drug-sellers, they began getting people knocking on their door at all hours of the day and night offering to sell to them, they said. Bill also learned firsthand how many local drug users financed their habits by shoplifting from local stores, which he was told are easy targets for thieves. "On at least five occasions I was offered brand-new jackets out of the store in exchange for $10 or $20 just so these people could get their high for the day," he said. Bill himself became of victim of this drug-fueled theft, spotting a tape measure and knife stolen from his car at two drug houses. The thieves had traded them to the dealers for drugs. Some of their suppliers suspected the couple were working for the police - one asked where Bill got his money - but didn't let those worries stop them from selling drugs to the two anyway. Most of the people they dealt with had already been through the criminal justice system and didn't seem to fear the consequences if they were caught, they said. And as he grew more familiar with the players in the local drug trade through his task force work, Bill said he began to understand just how pervasive the problem is here. "I could take you right now, we could drive in your car and I could point them out to you on the street," he said. "I can take you to 20 different areas here in Astoria and say 'that house, that person, those people, that house, those kids you see there' - I can do that for you." That knowledge, the two said, made them realize Astoria was not a place they could raise their children. "We thought this would be a great community, a small community, everybody knows everybody," Carol said. "But when you're not wanting your kids to go out because you don't know what they're going to get into or who's going to approach them..." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart