Pubdate: Thu, 31 Oct 2002 Source: Eastern Daily Press (UK) Copyright: 2002, Archant Regional Contact: http://www.edp24.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/131 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) POLICE SNATCH CRACK COCAINE STASH DETECTIVES believe they have busted a bid by London crooks to re-establish a supply line of crack cocaine into Norwich. Around UKP10,000 worth of the drug was recovered in a raid on a city flat in what is being hailed as the most significant seizure since Norwich police's blitz last month on crack cocaine trafficking. That operation saw UKP100,000 worth of class A drugs recovered and 35 people arrested, including eight dealers with known "Yardie" connections, the term for ferocious Jamaican villains. At the time police described them as "major league wholesalers", the highest echelon involved in bringing the drug from London into Norwich. The arrests and seizures, which took place at the beginning of September, saw the flow of crack in Norwich dry up. Police warned at the time, that they expected other dealers would attempt to get the drugs market back online. But officers have intelligence-gathering structures in place, including informants on the ground, to tip them off about new dealers trying to fill the void in the market. The latest raid, on a flat in Magdalen Close last Friday, was not the first time such an attempt was thwarted, but it is thought to have been the biggest bust so far. It saw two Londoners arrested, as well as the occupier of the flat. While officers were searching the property, two other men turned up and were arrested. One was already wanted by police and the other was found with some cannabis on him. The raid was carried out by officers deployed on the ongoing Operation Brickle, the police's purge on burglary and associated crime. Det Insp Dave Greenacre said: "We arrested three men from the flat, including two who were Afro-Caribbean and from the London area, and the occupier, as well as two going to the address. "This is the biggest seizure since the raids last month. "Officers in central area are maintaining a proactive approach to all aspects of criminality, especially the supply of class A drugs, as they are viewed as a catalyst for other acquisitive crime." The swoop shows the police's ongoing focus on disrupting the supply of the drug, which has been linked to a recent rise in street robberies, burglaries and car break-ins. The clampdown at the beginning of September has been linked to a 12 per cent drop in violent crime last month and a 14 per cent fall in vehicle crime. Rocks of crack cocaine usually cost around UKP25 each. Drug treatment workers say addicts can spend hundreds of pounds a week on their habit. The cash is usually raised through crime. * Brickle officers have also arrested two other suspected burglars over the past week. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk