Pubdate: Sun, 10 Nov 2002 Source: Times Daily (Florence, AL) Copyright: 2002 Times Daily Contact: http://www.timesdaily.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1641 Author: Bernie Delinski DRUG CONNECTION Facing Uncertain Funding, Task Forces Seek Right Mix Whenever Lauderdale County Sheriff-elect Ronnie Willis investigates a case, a thought crosses his mind. It doesn't matter if the crime is a theft, burglary, homicide or assault, Willis knows that odds are the crime is probably connected to drug use. Authorities throughout the area say the same thing. "If we didn't have drugs as a problem, then we wouldn't have the spinoffs of thefts, violent crimes and other cases involved in drug purchases and getting money for drugs," said Colbert County District Attorney Gary Alverson. "We'd have practically no cases to worry about. That's true of most everywhere in the country." Two agencies - the Lauderdale County Drug Task Force and Colbert County Drug Task Force - have full-time officers dedicated to fighting drug use and drug deals in the Shoals. There are four agents and a secretary in Colbert, and five agents in Lauderdale, according to the task forces. The task forces have taken on different forms over the years. At one time, there was a single task force for much of north Alabama. At another time, there was a Shoals task force. Another time, the Muscle Shoals Police Department was part of a Lauderdale task force. Willis is fresh off last week's election as Lauderdale's sheriff. He said it is too early to know whether the Lauderdale task force will again change forms, although he isn't ruling it out. In an interview with the TimesDaily's editorial board during his campaign for sheriff, Willis said he was considering the idea of having the sheriff's department form its own task force next year when the countywide task force's grant runs out. Willis now says he intends to discuss the matter with other task force agencies once he is sworn in as sheriff in January. "I want to get with them before putting my two cents in," Willis said. "I'll be looking at options and want to make the right decision to help the citizens of Lauderdale County in the fight against drugs." Florence police, the Lauderdale district attorney's office, the Lauderdale sheriff's office and University of North Alabama police are members of the Lauderdale agency. Grants and local funds The task forces operate on annual Justice Department grants, distributed by the Alabama Department of Economic and Community Affairs. The current grant runs through March 31, 2003, Florence Deputy Chief Tony Logan said. "So, any decision would have to be made at that point." Logan said he is pleased with the way the task force is operating and hasn't heard discussions about changes at task force board meetings. "The agencies seem to do a good job working well together." The federal grant for this 12-month operation is $168,500, Logan said. Members of the task force match that with a combined $56,166, for a total of $224,666. Willis said the one major benefit he sees in having separate task forces for Florence and Lauderdale County involves detecting other crimes connected to drug busts. "Your drug man could work with investigators in your department to be able, for example, to recover stolen goods connected with the drug purchases," Willis said. "Most break-ins are drug-related, but the drug officer just works drugs, so he wouldn't know about the stolen items, unless an investigator who is not with the drug task force is with him." Willis said the major benefit of having a countywide task force like the existing one in Lauderdale is more people work drug cases together. Having only one task force in the county also helps prosecutors in the courtroom, said Doug Evans, Lauderdale's chief assistant district attorney. "It concentrates all the drug cases into one force," Evans said. "That gives the officers experience in that area, which helps in a case." Alverson said it works well to have one drug task force per circuit, which in Colbert and Lauderdale's case means one task force in each county. "The prosecutor in that circuit is going to handle all the cases," he said. The Colbert task force received $213,333 to operate this year, Alverson said. That includes a federal grant of $160,000, with local governments providing the remaining money. Strength in numbers It would be difficult for cities the size of Sheffield, Tuscumbia and Muscle Shoals to each have a full-time agent assigned to drug cases, Alverson said. That is another advantage of a countywide task force. "Unless an agency is very large, you can't justify a full-time narcotics worker." The task forces in Colbert and Lauderdale often work together. "Drug dealers don't care where someone's jurisdiction ends and another one's starts," Alverson said. "They'll sell drugs wherever they can." The Colbert task force involves the district attorney's office, sheriff's office, and police departments in Muscle Shoals, Tuscumbia, Sheffield, Littleville, Leighton and Cherokee, Sheriff Ronnie May said. "The task force updates the agencies quarterly on what they're buying and where they're buying." The Colbert grant runs through May 31, 2003, May said. About 60 felony drug arrests have been made since this year's grant started June 1. May said a countywide task force works well. He said larger ones that incorporate multiple counties have caused problems in the past, because there are too many bosses for a handful of workers. Large task forces also bring logistical problems, such as trying to keep up with drug traffic in several counties, May said. He said there also is the concern that one county might feel it's not getting enough attention, compared to other counties in a task force region. Colbert officials say they generally are pleased with their task force and don't have plans to change its makeup. Sheffield Police Chief Doug Aycock remembers the days of a six-county task force. He said that was too large an area, and he remembers turf wars developing among agencies. "Better results have been obtained by having it countywide," Evans said. "You know your local area better than you do an area that's 80 miles away." Avoiding temptations Philip Carlan, assistant professor of criminal justice at the University of North Alabama, likes the idea of multi-jurisdictional task forces like Lauderdale and Colbert have. The thought of smaller task forces, or individual agencies handling drug cases on their own, troubles him. Carlan said if one agency had its own drug officers, with no other agencies overseeing them, that could lead to problems. "Anytime you start talking about deunifying, it's trouble." Carlan said it is easier to fall into corrupt ways when everything stays in one agency. He said nobody - even a police officer - should be placed in a tempting situation, where they know they wouldn't get turned in for doing something wrong. "It's not really always about the people," Carlan said. "It's about the structure. "Putting a police officer in that position is wrong," he said. "The easier you make it to be lured into corruption, the less fair it is on the officer, because he would be the one who would get in trouble if he did something illegal. "People who are attracted to policing are good people, but some are put in a bad situation." Carlan said it is that way in any profession, especially one that offers temptations such as large sums of money. He said he doesn't mean to imply there is anything corrupt going on locally, but he wants officers to be able to avoid a situation that provides easy temptation. There is a lot of money and property involved in seizures. That helps pay for operations and other things, such as training. David Scogin, head of the Lauderdale Drug Task Force, said they also have accumulated more than $100,000 in forfeitures in the past three years. They also have seized 15-20 vehicles, Scogin said. Some are used by agents in surveillance missions. "We've seen everything from a $30,000 vehicle to a $200 vehicle. It seems it's always the best type of vehicle or the worst - nothing in between." Alverson said close to $100,000 in task force forfeitures have been obtained. That money has been used to help provide funds for the task force grants. Seizures aren't always just money and vehicles. Alverson knows of cases in which property and construction equipment were seized. Weapons and drugs also are common seizures, Scogin said. "We've gotten over 100 handguns off the street during search warrants," he said. The future May said task force grants are highly competitive. He said seizures and case numbers are carefully studied by ADECA when the agency considers how to hand out the grants. Tom Goree, director of law enforcement programs for ADECA, said another factor is available federal money. "If we get a cut in funding, we have to pass that on." Goree said ADECA received about $7 million from the Justice Department for task forces, which was about 2 percent less than the previous year. He said the state generally receives about $1 in federal funds for every $5 it requests. A national emphasis has been placed on homeland security since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, Goree said. He has heard rumors about that emphasis changing the amount of money drug agencies receive. Goree doesn't know if that would mean less funding because the money would be redirected, or more money for the agencies, with an emphasis on anti-terrorist training. "It's no secret that terrorist groups are financed through drug money." That will be decided by Congress next year, he said. Training is important to task forces, because the types of drugs used and their sources frequently change. Evans said crack cocaine has been a major problem, but methamphetamine seems to be becoming the newest big problem. Often, information obtained by one drug task force at a training session is shared with others. "County drug task forces should be able to work cooperatively without worrying about who makes the most cases, or who gets the credit," May said. "The Shoals is so close, there should be good communications, and there is." - --- MAP posted-by: Alex