Pubdate: Fri, 19 Jul 2002 Source: Bellingham Herald (WA) Copyright: 2002 Bellingham Herald Contact: http://www.bellinghamherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/43 Author: John Stark, The Bellingham Herald POLICE, INFORMANTS UNITE TO SEIZE DRUG SUSPECTS CRIME: Detectives Watched Brazen Curbside Drug Deals 4 Months Ago. Just four months ago, two Bellingham narcotics detectives noticed that things were not the same on Railroad Avenue. They noticed circling cars whose drivers made brazen curbside drug deals. When they made busts, the drug they confiscated was something comparatively new here: crack cocaine instead of the heroin, methamphetamine or marijuana they had come to expect. "It was almost like downtown Seattle," one of the detectives said. "We said, 'Man, this is Bellingham. It's not supposed to be like that here.' " Their initial investigation indicated that crack dealers from Tacoma and Seattle were moving to Bellingham, where competition from other dealers was apparently less intense and they could charge two to three times the prices they got farther south - once they converted local addicts to the drug. That apparently didn't take long. The two detectives then organized the three-month undercover buying binge that set the stage for Wednesday's arrest of 13 people on suspicion of selling and possessing drugs, mostly crack. "Joe," a recovering meth addict, was one of those who helped. Joe (not his real name) said he came to police to volunteer for undercover informant duty because the dealers he used to patronize would not leave him alone. They wanted him to buy - and they wanted him to steer other addicts to them. That was something he used to do before he got cleaned up. "I couldn't go anywhere," he said. "They just kept bugging me. I'd go walking down the street and they'd find me. I'd tell 'em, 'No, forget it, I ain't doing it.' They wouldn't leave me alone. ... It pissed me off." The two detectives gladly enlisted Joe in their investigation. They explained the procedure: The undercover informant arranges a drug buy, usually by telephone. Police give the informant the cash for the deal, and they watch from a distance as the deal is done, usually making sound and video recordings. Even as they watch, detectives know there are often others watching for them. The two detectives said they have seen drug dealers' spotters using binoculars atop the roof of the Parkade on Commercial Street and from vantage points at the Bellingham Inn at Holly Street and Railroad Avenue. Undercover officers frequently change cars and even clothes, they said, to reduce the risk of detection. "Retail" drug trade, from street dealer to user, often takes place on downtown streets, particularly Railroad Avenue or in motel rooms anywhere in the city, Bellingham police Lt. Todd Ramsay said. Bigger "wholesale" deals, where mid-level distributors supply larger quantities to street dealers, often take place in parking lots in and around Bellis Fair mall, where people carrying and passing packages are less likely to attract attention, he said. Drugs Easy to Buy Another undercover drug buyer, "Ruth," said she went to work for the police to earn herself leniency on a forged-check charge. Long after that got straightened out, she stayed on the job. "I have two little sisters and they're both crackheads," she explained. "It pisses me off, basically." As she explained it, making drug buys on Railroad Avenue is pathetically easy "from the bus depot all the way to the gravel pathway past the farmers market." "You can stand out in front of the hotel (Bellingham Inn) and people will come and talk to you: 'You want some rocks, you want some weed, you want some cheeva (heroin)?" she said. The buys made by Ruth, Joe, other informants and undercover police officers were used to establish the probable cause that laid the legal groundwork for Wednesday's arrests. A year ago, Ruth said, most of the drug activity on Railroad was meth, known to users as "crank." That has changed. "Now there's so much crack it's pitiful," she said. "Probably one out of five people down there (on Railroad) are doing it. Maybe three out of five." "Crack" is refined from powdered cocaine by boiling it with ammonia or baking soda and water. The resulting creamy-colored, crumbly residue is then smoked. A mass of crack cocaine in the police evidence locker bears an uncanny resemblance to a Rice Krispies treat. A "rock" not much bigger than a sesame seed costs $5 to $20 and delivers an intense high for one hour, followed by an intense desire to smoke another rock. Detectives say they need undercover informants like Joe and Ruth to bust street-level crack dealers, because when they try to grab dealers in the act on the street, they too often easily dispose of the tiny evidence by tossing it or swallowing it before police can get it. The street dealers are often users themselves, and they typically employ other addicts as "runners" who recruit buyers and steer them to dealers in exchange for a little cash or crack, police said. Ruth said dealers are competitive. If a dealer sees a user making a buy from someone else, the dealer will approach that user and try to entice him or her with a better deal, she said. Ruth said she resents the drug's invasion of downtown. "Downtown used to be where I would hang out in the malt shop at the Bon," she said. "I wouldn't let my kids hang out there now." Drugs Persistent On Thursday, members of the city's drug subculture didn't disappear. Some of them - including one trio who were inside a Cascade Inn room that was raided Wednesday but weren't arrested - wandered aimlessly downtown. A bike patrol officer who participated in Wednesday's roundup said she too had noticed known crack users on the streets, looking in vain for their accustomed drug suppliers. She predicted that drug dealers would gradually creep back unless police kept the pressure on. Downtown shopkeepers agreed that Wednesday's raid seemed to cause a big drop-off in undesirable street activity. "They (drug users) are being very quiet and they're very unhappy, and that's fine with me," said one merchant who asked not to be identified. Lefty Hendrickson, a shoe repairman at Sandy and Vale's Shoe Repair, 1333 Railroad Ave., said he hoped the rash of bad publicity for the avenue was over. "I wish The Herald would praise Railroad once," he said. "Railroad is not a bad street. There's a lot of good businesses on this street." Tony Averson, the operator of Bellingham Inn, agreed. He said he welcomed the police crackdown, which included a bust inside one of the inn's first-floor rooms. "I'm glad it happened," he said. "It makes a statement. We've got a good city down here and we're not going to put up with it anymore." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake