Pubdate: Thu, 29 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: Philip Cornford Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) FACELESS DEALERS OPERATING BEHIND STEEL DOOR FORTRESSES The way into a Cabramatta heroin fortress is a hatch in the door. Or a steel grille you can get your arm through. All that buyers - including undercover police - get to see is a hand or an arm as money is passed in and the heroin passed out. They never see a face or any evidence of identification that will stand up in court. All they hear is a muffled voice, stating the price, asking how much they want. The transaction takes no more than a minute, from knock to departure. With a heroin drought drying up supplies and forcing up prices, the illegal trade has moved indoors in a big way. Street deals are in decline. On the streets, dealers are vulnerable to police undercover "sting" operations. They can be photographed doing a deal, evidence sufficient for a conviction. Instead, the trai lu lac, the lost ones, the street kids in their grunge gear, sneakers and baseball caps, escort the buyers to the fortress, usually near the Cabramatta CBD. Police estimate about 40 such fortresses are operating in the Cabramatta area, almost all of them upper-storey units with only one approach, a narrow stairway. Usually, the stairs and hallways are under video surveillance, making it impossible to approach without being observed. "Cockatoos" are often posted outside the blocks to warn of police. The doors are protected by steel grilles. Steel plates are used to reinforce locks. The doors swing on steel internal hinges. The word fortress is apt. Under such conditions, a raid is difficult. By the time police smash their way in, incriminating heroin has been flushed down a toilet or sink, Assistant Commissioner Clive Small, commander of the Greater Hume region, which includes Cabramatta, said yesterday. It represents a considerable loss of heroin and income for the dealers. But profit margins are enormous - and there is no evidence that will get a conviction. Instead, police take a circuitous reprisal. The units are usually rented, so they inform the real estate agent that the premises are being used for heroin dealing. If the owner does not evict, the property can be seized. This is usually enough to make the dealers move to another unit. In the past nine months, Cabramatta police have raided and forced dealers to vacate 51 fortresses, 27 of them since February. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake