Pubdate: Mon, 26 Aug 2002 Source: Messenger-Inquirer (KY) Copyright: 2002 Messenger-Inquirer Contact: http://www.messenger-inquirer.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1285 Author: Justin Willis, Messenger-Inquirer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) CITY, COUNTY JOIN FORCES AGAINST DRUGS Departments Say Information-sharing Paying Off In Arrests When tips of illegal drug activity surfaced two weeks ago involving Daviess County and Owensboro locations, two law enforcement agencies shared their information, staked out both locations and made arrests. The incident was one of about three joint investigations in the past two weeks involving the Owensboro Police Department and the Daviess County Sheriff's Department. The two agencies have cooperated well during the past few years but hope to keep building on that relationship, resulting in better intelligence and larger drug seizures, Daviess County Sheriff Keith Cain says. Cain and Owensboro acting Police Chief John Kazlauskas plan to meet in the upcoming weeks to discuss further ways the two agencies can assist each other. "It's a sign of continuing cooperation," Cain said. "We anticipate that if it changes, it will change for the better, especially with the new administration." Often the jurisdictional lines that divide the two agencies are crossed by criminals who buy methamphetamine-making materials in city stores and head outside the city to find anhydrous ammonia. The drug may be manufactured in the county and sold in the city. Police realize that criminals do not recognize jurisdictional boundaries, Cain said. Kazlauskas said the city police department will work with any law enforcement agency to share information and combat drugs. "We recognize that our area suffers from a plague of methamphetamine, and the sheriff's department has done an outstanding job out in the county with all the anhydrous ammonia," Kazlauskas said. "What happens in the county certainly comes into the city. It's a community problem, and we've got to work together to combat it." In addition to the meth problem, there seems to be evidence of marijuana on the rise, which is alarming information, he said. City police Sgt. David Thompson, who oversees the street crimes unit, usually talks each day with sheriff's Detective Sgt. Jim Acquisto, who is the county's narcotics investigator. "It pays off to have them assist us, and they do the same thing," Thompson said. "If they hear of anything in the city, Jim Acquisto always calls me, and we assist each other." During the past two weeks the street crimes unit, which investigates a broad range of crimes, nearly doubled when the department structure shifted and the unit encompassed the department's special enforcement unit, which handles narcotics and vice. Currently, the unit consists of Thompson and nine officers. In two weeks the unit has worked with the sheriff's department and also participated in a Hopkins County investigation, Thompson said. In that case, evidence of Owensboro drug trafficking led investigators to a Hopkins County connection, he said. About 7 pounds of marijuana and several new Cadillacs were seized. Thompson said an example of the benefit of having two groups combine forces was recorded in the past two weeks when the street crimes unit, with help form the sheriff's department, seized 10 pounds of marijuana and $45,000 cash, busted two meth labs and arrested four people. "That is because of the intelligence and informants combined in this unit," he said. "We have a whole lot more people that I can spread out." The unit now has enough staff to provide 24-hour surveillance on suspected criminal activity, he said. Often sharing intelligence between the sheriff's department and city police department results in additional information about the same suspect, Thompson said. "I find by working with each other, the intelligence gathering is just tremendous," Thompson said. "When you put them together, it makes for a much easier case." Acquisto formerly worked for the Pennyrile Drug Task Force, which encompasses 10 counties in western Kentucky, and he knows firsthand the benefits of multiagency intelligence and communication. Currently, the sheriff's department and Owensboro police have a good working relationship, he said. "We've worked with them on several cases," he said. "We meet quite often and share intelligence. We're constantly communicating with each other." Without cooperation between the departments, separate investigations could focus on the same person or criminal group, he said. In other parts of the country, law enforcement agencies have duplicated services, with one agency staking out an alleged criminal operation while they watch another police agency make an undercover transaction with the suspected criminals. Daviess County does not have a multiagency drug task force, unlike Warren, Hardin and Jefferson counties, which pool resources from agencies to combat drugs and other crime. "I think we're doing as good as we can with what we have," Acquisto said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl