Pubdate: Thu, 13 Jun 2002 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 2002 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: http://www.suntimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/81 Author: Carlos Sadovi CITY TARGETS HEROIN BUYERS FROM THE SUBURBS People who drive into the city to buy drugs will not only face jail time but now could lose their cars and driver's licenses under a new crackdown to be announced today by Cook County prosecutors and police. The state's attorney's office began sending letters Wednesday to school superintendents in the six-county region, asking them to warn students that if they head to the city for drugs and get caught, they might be hoofing it back home, and the owners of the cars will have to pay huge fees to get them back. "We're trying to attack the buyers," said William O'Brien, chief of the narcotics bureau for the state's attorney's office. "We have a huge problem with heroin on the West Side, and the bulk of those people are suburbanites." The initiative involves members of the Chicago Police, the Cook County sheriff's office, the secretary of state's office and DuPage County officials as well as the Chicago office of the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area, which is linked with the federal drug czar's office. State law allows the secretary of state's office to suspend for up to a year the driver's licenses of people who have been buying or possessing drugs while driving. But the law is only sporadically invoked. Since 1996, only 1,035 people in the state have had their licenses suspended for such offenses, said David Druker, a spokesman for the secretary of state's office. "A lot of people aren't aware we are doing this," Druker said. "Hopefully, saying you can lose your car if you do this, and the secretary of state saying you're going to lose your license if a car is involved ... will discourage people from the purchase of drugs." The crackdown will eventually be countywide but will begin in the West Side neighborhoods flanking the Eisenhower Expy. because of the brisk heroin business on street corners there. About 60 percent of all heroin deals in the city are in this area. The vast number of people caught buying heroin on the West Side from 2000 to 2001 came from suburbs in western Cook County and DuPage and Lake counties, according to Chicago Police statistics. "This is to send a message to drug buyers who live in the suburbs," police spokesman Dave Bayless said. "There will be greater ramifications than just being arrested. Some of the younger kids will have to explain this to their parents when their parents' cars are towed away." In the letter to school superintendents, State's Attorney Dick Devine asks that driver education teachers include the "consequences of driving into the city to purchase narcotics." When a buyer hitting the West Side open-air drug markets is arrested, the car will be seized and towed, and the owner will have to pay towing and storage fees that could run into the hundreds of dollars. "It will be held hostage until mom and dad can come down and bail out the car," O'Brien said. "We are highlighting the law, and we are going to use it as an enforcement tool." Arrests may initially flood the court system, but officials will give people the option to seek treatment, O'Brien said. If they turn it down, prosecutors will bypass preliminary hearings where many judges throw out petty drug cases. Instead, they will immediately seek a grand jury indictment against the buyers. That means buyers also will have to fork over more cash for lawyer fees. "Upon conviction, the secretary of state's office will move in," O'Brien said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth