Pubdate: Wed, 07 Aug 2002
Source: Florida Times-Union (FL)
Copyright: 2002 The Florida Times-Union
Contact: http://www.times-union.com/aboutus/letters_to_editor.html
Website: http://www.times-union.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/155
Author: Teresa Stepzinski and Terry Dickson
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture)

A TOOL TO FIGHT CRIME OR JUST A LOT OF FLASH?

$93,000 Viper Raises Questions For Camden

WOODBINE -- The Camden County Sheriff's Department believes an expensive 
sports car is the way to get kids' attention about the dangers of illegal 
drugs.

The county's new Drug Awareness and Resistance Education (DARE) car is a 
2001 Dodge Viper RT/10 capable of going up to 200 mph.

The cost: $93,000.

"With television and video games, it's hard to impress kids and grab their 
attention. The whole point of this car is the grab the kids' attention," 
said Lt. William Terrell, sheriff's office spokesman. "Once we have their 
attention, then we can focus on getting them to listen and show them how to 
resist peer pressure to use drugs and alcohol."

Others, however, wonder if the car, which recently won a national contest 
in Las Vegas, Nev., for its custom paint job, cost too much.

Camden County Commissioner Bob Becker called the win "a publicity gimmick" 
that gives the department a lot of notoriety.

"But does it improve law enforcement?" he asked. "I would hope it would. I 
have my doubts."

The sports car was purchased with forfeited drug money from seizures made 
by Camden deputies on Interstate 95, Terrell said.

"It didn't cost the taxpayers anything. It all was paid for entirely with 
confiscated drug money," he said. "And if we can reach even just one kid 
with this car, then it's worth it."

The car itself was $78,000. Additional costs include: a trailer, $5,500; 
paint job, $5,000; custom embroidery, $300; GPS system, $1,000; and police 
package including blue lights, siren and radio, $3,000.

The department's DARE officer, Capt. David Gregory, acknowledged that a few 
people have complained about the money spent on the car, but that most 
recognize its drawing power and the importance of the anti- drug message.

"The sheriff's response has been you can't put a price on a child's life," 
he said.

And the DARE car may indeed save some lives and improve others, Gregory 
said. Although some studies have asserted that DARE programs are not 
cost-effective, Gregory says he has anecdotal evidence that contradicts the 
surveys.

"I've seen some kids in troubled environments come out of that clean. If I 
had to sum it up in one word, it's hope," he said.

If the forfeited assets were not used for the DARE car, it could not be 
used in public works projects, for county salaries and other items that are 
funded by property taxes, Gregory said.

U.S. Attorney Rick Thompson said there are strict guidelines on the use of 
assets seized in federal drug cases that are turned over to counties.

"Broadly speaking, it must be law-enforcement related," said Thompson, 
adding that a DARE car fits because it is drug education.

Becker said he would like to have some input on how future purchases using 
drug money are made.

"The trouble still comes down to seized asset money is county money and not 
just the sheriff's money," he said.

Should Sheriff Bill Smith spend some of the money improperly, federal 
officials would demand repayment from the County Commission, Becker said.

"I don't disagree with what he's done with it," Becker said of the car 
purchase. "I had no opportunity to disagree. He just did it and he had the 
authority to do it."

County Administrator Barry King said that, to his knowledge, Smith spent no 
tax, fine or fee revenue on the car beyond paying the salaries of officers 
who worked on it.

But some commissioners have challenged Smith's request for a $3.7 million 
annual budget for his department and persuaded him to reduce it to $2.8 
million, King said. Even with the reduction, Smith is spending $64.13 per 
capita, far higher than the state average of $39 per capita for counties 
like Camden, King said.

Of the DARE car expense, King said, "He [Smith] calls it other people's 
money, but we have to pay the cost of the [DARE] officer."

Both Becker and King cited studies that say DARE is only marginally 
successful and noted that many departments have dropped it entirely.

Camden County's drug enforcement efforts along I-95, a well-known drug 
pipeline between South Florida and the northeastern United States, have 
been financial boon for the Sheriff's Department. Terrell said that over 
the past 15 years the county has seized more than $14 million in cash, with 
those funds going to buy patrol cars, weapons and training and education 
programs.

"We have used those funds for a lot of less flashy purposes than this car," 
he said.

He said the same county officials critical of the department for buying the 
Viper don't mention that the sheriff's department didn't used budgeted tax 
dollars for buying police cars. That's because seized drug funds were used 
to purchase those vehicles, he said.

"We knew we were going to get some criticism on this, but the sheriff 
really believes it's worth the cost to reach kids about the dangers of 
drugs," he said. "We realize that other counties that don't have an 
interstate running through them wouldn't have this ability [to buy the car] 
and we wouldn't either if we didn't have I-95."

Staff writer Greg Walsh contributed to this report.
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