Pubdate: Tue, 24 Sep 2002 Source: Kennebec Journal (ME) Copyright: 2002 Blethen Maine Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.centralmaine.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1405 TO STOP DRUGS WE MUST ADDRESS SUPPLY, DEMAND Law enforcement officials in Kennebec and Somerset counties have scored two victories in the unending war on drugs recently. While these interdiction efforts are crucial to the fight against substance abuse, they won't put an end to drug use by themselves. On Sept. 15, Augusta police detectives and agents with the Maine Drug Enforcement Agency arrested a Massachusetts couple as part of the largest heroin bust in the city's history. Police confiscated 500 bags of heroin and 19 grams of crack cocaine with a combined street value of more than $19,000. Juan Ramone Taveras, a 23-year-old Worcester man, has been charged with aggravated trafficking of heroin and cocaine within 1,000 feet of a school, two class A crimes punishable by up to 20 years in prison. Police say Taveras hid a large amount of his drugs in a child's toy and had his 2-year-old son with him when he attempted to sell the drugs. Three days later, on Sept. 18, Somerset County Detective Lt. Carl Gottardi and Kennebec Sheriff's deputy Kingston Paul (who is also a member of the Fairfield Police Department) arrested a Gardiner man on charges of cultivating marijuana. They also seized 38 6-foot-tall marijuana plants worth an estimated $20,000. This was no low-key agricultural effort. Investigators say that when they arrested John H. Smith, he was preparing to set up video surveillance equipment to protect his investment. These drug busts are dramatic and rightly garner the public's attention. However, they represent just a small portion of the amount of drugs that are coming into central Maine these days. Assistant Attorney General James M. Cameron points out that despite the fact that the heroin bust was the biggest in Augusta's history, there's evidence that Taveras wasn't making his first trip when he was arrested. "The amount of drugs brought in by Mr. Taveras is many times the amount he was arrested with," Cameron observed. Furthermore, for every would-be drug dealer who is caught, there are, according to Maine Drug Enforcement agents, a dozen more ready to take his place. It's a simple application of the law of supply and demand: As long as people in central Maine are willing to pay nearly $20,000 for drugs that can be hid in a small child's toy, dealers in Massachusetts will be willing to risk their freedom to drive up Interstate 95 with cocaine and heroin. This isn't an argument to curtail interdiction efforts. Rather, it does suggest that drug busts and other efforts to interrupt the supply chain will succeed over the long-term when they are coupled with efforts to interrupt the demand side. That means that police and sheriff departments should continue their prevention efforts, especially those focused on young people. It also means that the state ought to be supporting efforts to help addicts and substance abusers lead drug-free lives. Prevention efforts and treatment programs rarely produce big headlines, but they do produce results. If central Maine wants to stop the flow of drugs into the region, officials here should address both supply and demand. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake