Pubdate: Thu, 25 Jul 2002
Source: Valley News Dispatch (PA)
Copyright: 2002 The Tribune-Review Publishing Co.
Contact:  http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/valleynewsdispatch/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2285
Author: Chuck Biedka

DRUGS IN YOUR TOWN

Capt. Jack Plaisted of the Butler police was surprised when a pistol 
reported stolen in the city turned up less than two months later in an 
attempted homicide in Austin, Texas.

"Then I learned that drugs were involved," he said.

For police, it was just another case of the long reach now seen in the drug 
and gun trade. Increasingly, investigators say, the so-called "local drug 
dealer" is becoming a thing of the past.

In the Valley and surrounding region, even street-level dealers travel 
widely. From the inner city to rural country roads and across state lines - 
even across the country - drug dealers are expanding their territories and 
client bases.

Valley and outside traffickers sell heroin, crack and other drugs along 
city streets and in suburbs and rural areas, and they steal, trade and sell 
guns.

Users steal from friends and family, and break into stores and houses for 
money or anything that can be sold for quick cash. They also trade guns or 
sex to get drugs.

Increasingly, Valley traffickers - mostly a loose confederation of people 
who sometimes work together - are buying and selling drugs well outside of 
their home territories.

If the dealers had a single business card, it might very well read, "Have 
drugs, will travel" and give a cell-phone number or e-mail address.

During a 16-month study, the Valley News Dispatch talked with addicts, 
counselors, police officers, federal agents and drug-trend analysts to ask 
about home-grown traffickers who, at times, do business throughout the country.

According to police and court records, the desire for more money sends 
small-town dealers throughout the Valley - and places such as Philadelphia, 
New York, Texas, Arizona and parts of West Virginia and Ohio - as well as 
sections of Pittsburgh known for drugs and guns.

If the risk is right, dealers will travel hundreds of miles, or send 
assistants, to buy from suppliers, public records claim.

All the way to Texas

On March 14, 2001, a Butler man told police someone took his .40- caliber 
semi-automatic pistol. Federal agents believe the gun likely was taken to 
Pittsburgh or somewhere in the Valley before it was used in the Austin 
shooting.

The victim, a reputed Austin drug dealer, survived. Two men with close ties 
to the Valley are charged with trying to kill him when he refused to buy 
drugs from them.

Jordan M. Greenlee, 20, of Austin - but who has stayed in New Kensington - 
and James P. "Will" Edwards, 20, of New Ken-sington were arrested in New 
Kensington for the Austin shooting.

Greenlee and Edwards face "attempted capital murder" and related charges in 
Texas' Travis County court.

Greenlee also is accused of a shotgun robbery at an Austin convenience store.

Edwards' attorney insists his client is falsely accused.

The men's trial was postponed several times and now is scheduled for no 
earlier than next month, a Travis County prosecutor said.

Arrest reports allege the case has more ties to the Valley than the 
hometowns of the accused.

A witness told police an Arnold woman and her associate paid him to drive 
Greenlee and Edwards to Texas in a rented car.

Austin police looking for Greenlee and Edwards found the rental car and its 
driver.

According to a police affidavit, police found the car's rental receipt in 
the glove box. The receipt was signed by "Angel Hensley." Police also found 
drugs and another pistol hidden in the car.

New Kensington police think Angel L. Hensley, 25, of 1350 Third Ave., 
Arnold, paid for the the car and driver and sent the men to Austin. The 
associate is Kyle "Face" Harrison of New Kensington.

No charges have been filed against Hensley or Harrison in the Austin case, 
and Hensley's attorney, Dante Bertani of Greensburg, steadfastly denies the 
accusations.

Bertani represents Hensley on a separate charge of hindering prosecution 
when the FBI arrested Cleveland fugitive Larry Weathersby in her Arnold 
house last week. Hensley also is accused of illegally possessing a handgun 
during a drug raid in 2001 at a house near Latrobe.

Bertani said the FBI has twice talked with Hensley concerning a drug- 
related abduction of two women and a man last May along the 200 block of 
Fifth Avenue, New Kensington. Hensley knows the three, one of whom is 
Harrison's sister, but that's it, Bertani said.

Two Penn Hills men have been arrested, and the FBI and local police are 
looking for other suspects.

Central Westmoreland, too

Numerous Valley residents have been arrested for selling drugs in central 
and southern Westmoreland County.

"We're seeing people from New Kensington show up in Derry and Latrobe," 
said Westmoreland County Detective Terry Kuhns, a former New Kensington 
police officer.

"They move into rural areas because of lack of competition, and they can 
intimidate people by saying they're connected," Kuhns said. "Some people in 
rural areas just don't know any better."

There are many other examples of Valley drug interests spreading their wings.

Last summer and fall, the U.S. District Court in Wheeling, W.Va., 
prosecuted a drug dealer with Valley connections and almost a dozen others, 
said Fawn E. Thomas, a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney's office in Wheeling.

Last October, Jerome Allen, 24, also known as "D.L." and "Jason Jones" of 
Longvue Road, New Kensington, pleaded guilty to selling cocaine. He 
received a 16-year prison term and fine for his role in the West Virgina case.

The New Kensington Police Department assisted the Ohio Valley Drug & 
Violent Crime Task Force that draws officers from federal and state law 
enforcement agencies and local police departments, according to U.S. Drug 
Enforcement Administration Special Agent Robert Manchis.

Valley officers also helped with the investigation of some of the others, 
from Cleveland and Pontiac, Mich., who were convicted following the same 
grand jury investigation.

Closer to home, Westmoreland and Armstrong county prosecutors believe a 
failed drug robbery ended with a Kiski Township man being shot and beaten 
to death last summer.

Three 18-year-old men, who were 17 at the time of the killing, and three 
women are charged in the homicide of Larry Dunmire, 48, of Sugar Hollow 
Road. The coroner said he died late June 14, 2001, or early the next day.

Prosecutors believe one of the women told the boys that Dunmire had drugs 
and money, and Dunmire was killed when he fought back. His body, hands tied 
with a nylon dog leash, was found along a road in Bell Township near the 
burned-out hulk of his van.

The pistol used to kill Dunmire, federal authorities said, was stolen from 
a Harmar gun dealer in February 2001.

Supply follows demand

The expansion of drug dealers' territories is a result of suburban demand, 
said Ernest Batista, who directed the federal Drug Enforcement Agency 
office at Pittsburgh in the 1990s.

Dealers see a large number of suburban users driving into urban areas to 
buy drugs "so they begin to realize there is a market for it, and they go 
to rural areas," he said.

Cocaine networks exist, so most dealers are "piggybacking Colombian heroin 
on the cocaine distribution routes," Batista said. The result of the 
cheaper, snortable Colombian heroin is a "bedroom community drug that is 
getting the all-American kids addicted."

Heroin is rapidly pushing aside cocaine and other drugs as the major 
threat, said Victor Joseph, a Valley native who supervises the state 
attorney general's drug task force for the region.

"You'd be surprised. It's everywhere in the suburbs," he said. "It's in 
Clairton, Bethel Park, Blairsville, Rostraver and California. It's in your 
area."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom