Pubdate: Wed, 28 Mar 2001
Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)
Copyright: 2001 The Sydney Morning Herald
Contact:  GPO Box 3771, Sydney NSW 2001
Fax: 61-(0)2-9282 3492
Website: http://www.smh.com.au/
Forum: http://forums.fairfax.com.au/
Author: Geesche Jacobsen

CARR SOOLS POLICE ON TO SUSPECTED DRUG HOUSES

NSW police will get unprecedented powers to fight the war against drugs, 
including the right to seize houses they suspect are being used for dealing 
and to charge people seen entering or leaving those houses.

The new laws will apply across the State, although the Premier made clear 
yesterday they have been prompted by what he called "very, very serious 
problems" at Cabramatta.

Under a package Mr Carr announced in State Parliament, police will be given 
powers to "move on" people they suspect of being go-betweens for drug 
dealers. They will be able to arrest those who act as lookouts or guards at 
houses used for the supply of drugs.

The owners of "drug houses" will be compelled to end their use for dealing 
or face the possibility of confiscation by the State, regardless of whether 
drugs have been found on the property.

This tightens existing legislation that allows houses to be seized if drugs 
have been found.

Under the new system, 16 extra police will concentrate solely on Cabramatta.

Treatment will be compulsory for addicts on bail, and drug treatment 
places, education and welfare services will be expanded.

New police powers to charge people associated with so-called drug houses 
were designed to fix a legal loophole that prevented police from laying 
charges unless they found drugs on the premises, Mr Carr said.

The laws relating to drug houses will carry a one-year jail penalty for a 
first offence and five years for a second offence.

Between 50 and 80 heavily fortified homes with sophisticated warning 
systems are believed to be operating as drug houses around Cabramatta.

The commander of the Greater Hume region, Assistant Police Commissioner 
Clive Small, acknowledged the new laws "essentially" shift the burden of 
proof from police to people detained for entering suspected drug houses, 
who will have to prove their lawful purpose for being there.

"You can't say that we are going to fix Cabramatta's problems. What I can 
say is that we are going to make it much better for the citizens of 
Cabramatta," he said.

The "move-on" powers come as heroin supply has dried up, increasing its 
price ten-fold in the past three months. The heroin shortage has increased 
the number of addicts looking for drugs on the streets of Cabramatta.

Mr Carr said the laws should be passed by the end of June. "It is 
reasonable to expect these changes may swell prison numbers," he said, 
vowing to build more jails if needed.

A "Tactical Action Group" of 90 officers covering the Greater Hume region 
would be largely devoted to the problems of Cabramatta.

Ten drug detectives, six bicycle patrols and drug detection dogs would be 
added to the 108 police officers currently deployed in the suburb.

A review of the Bail Act would allow compulsory treatment and staying away 
from Cabramatta to become a condition of bail for drug addicts.

The package, while broadly welcomed by those calling for action on 
Cabramatta, was criticised by civil libertarians.

The vice-president of the NSW Council for Civil Liberties, Ms Pauline 
Wright, warned that drug houses needed to be carefully defined to avoid 
targeting the homes of ordinary citizens.

Mr Ross Treyvaud, an anti-drugs campaigner and head of the Cabramatta 
Chamber of Commerce, welcomed the announcement, but said it needed funding 
and commitment to work.

Fairfield Councillor Thang Ngo described it as an admission of failure and 
a Government backdown.
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