Pubdate: Fri, 15 Nov 2002 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 2002 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Contact: http://www.jsonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/265 Author: David Doege Note: A version of this story appeared in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel on Nov. 13, 2002. PROSECUTIONS RISING SHARPLY IN MILWAUKEE COUNTY'S WAR ON DRUGS Law enforcement officials can offer only partial answer for higher numbers The local war on drugs has never been hotter. Investigators, prosecutors and judges assigned to the battle have never been busier, and they can't completely explain it. In his spiffy downtown office where local law enforcement gets the latest intelligence and technology for the war on drugs, Erick Slamka said there's no clear-cut explanation for why narcotics investigators are putting cases together against drug traffickers at a record rate. "You won't get a definitive answer," said Slamka, who became director of the Milwaukee High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area program in 1998, after 35 years with the South Milwaukee Police Department. "You'll get opinions. "I think we're getting better at what we're doing." In his ever-cluttered Safety Building office, Milwaukee County District Attorney E. Michael McCann said he's puzzled over the jump in new drug cases for the past few months. "There is unparalleled cooperation between law enforcement agencies," McCann said. "There has never been that level of cooperation here before. "I think that is part of it." And in his chambers on a slow Friday in the Criminal Justice Facility, Milwaukee County Circuit Judge John Franke said the volume of cases he saw when he returned to drug court in 2001 for the first time in nine years dismayed him. "It's distressingly similar to what I saw before in terms of the nature of the defendants, the nature of the charges and the nature of the stories that we're hearing," Franke said. "The anecdotal facts raise a question of whether we are accomplishing anything." At the current rate, 2,540 new cases will be filed in Milwaukee County's three felony drug courts in 2002, an 18% increase over last year. The current projection would be 52% higher than 1997, when 1,668 cases were filed in the drug courts. Who are these dealers and why aren't they getting out while the getting is still good? Consider two recently filed cases. Rajko Markovic, a 25-year-old Portage native, pleaded no contest to cocaine trafficking in Columbia County Circuit Court earlier this year. While awaiting sentencing, he moved to Oak Creek and dealt cocaine out of an apartment he shared with his girlfriend, according to a new criminal complaint. When investigators came calling, according to the new complaint, he wanted his girlfriend, Erin K. Huebner, to take the fall by herself, telling her to hide his cocaine in her car, the complaint says. "You can't pin anything on me because I didn't have possession of anything," Markovic told investigators, according to the complaint. A prosecutor charged Huebner, 23, and Markovic with cocaine trafficking. Abraham Scull, 19, kept selling crack and marijuana out of his girlfriend's neighborhood in the 2500 block of N. 10th St. in Milwaukee, even though he was angering rivals who had been there longer, according to another complaint. "Other drug dealers in the area were upset with Abe because he was interfering in their business and many of the hypes (addicts) in the area were now going to Abe," a woman told police, according to a criminal complaint. "She stated that approximately one month ago, Abe and four of his associates jumped on another drug dealer and beat him so badly that the drug dealer had to go to Sinai Samaritan (Medical Center) for treatment." When bullets flew last month, one hit Scull's girlfriend, Lena Price, in the head, killing her, according to the complaint. Scull took off with the bag of crack he was planning to sell, was arrested later and was charged with cocaine trafficking, according to the complaint. Residents speak up McCann said that drug trafficking and the violence it spawns have residents complaining louder than ever. "If you go to neighborhood meetings on the near north side and the near south side, nine out of 10 times you're going to hear a complaint about a drug house," he said. "People are encouraged by the police to complain about drug dealing in their neighborhoods, and they are doing that. "There is a constant drumbeat in these neighborhoods, and the police are responding to it." Law enforcement's drug-trafficking program, which has been operating out of an office building on the eastern edge of downtown since 1998, makes it easier than ever for police to conduct narcotics investigations. With an annual budget of $4.5 million from the federal government and a charge to "measurably reduce drug trafficking and associated violent crime," the program isn't a law enforcement agency in the traditional sense. "We're a coordination umbrella to integrate state, local and federal efforts," Slamka said. In one room, intelligence officers from the National Guard process crime information. In another, enormous computer servers hum. In still another room, officers from departments throughout the southeastern corner of the state learn about interdicting drug shipments on freeways. "Hardly a week goes by that we don't offer training," Slamka said. The program also funds several initiatives that Slamka declined to disclose. More than anything else, it fosters cooperation between law enforcement agencies so drug investigations can be coordinated. "It's counterproductive to have two or three law enforcement agencies focusing on the same person or organization," Slamka said. 'Warlike atmosphere' One organization apparently being targeted for drug trafficking is the Latin Kings, five years after a major federal, state and local probe put more than 50 of the gang members in prison. "The Latin Kings are also involved in retribution and intimidation of witnesses who have provided information against the gang," police said in an affidavit filed in Circuit Court last month when officers obtained a search warrant for an alleged drug house. "The Latin Kings are involved in the substantial illegal distribution of controlled substances." Franke said the "warlike atmosphere" present in some neighborhoods because of drug dealing produces a variety of "costs." "There are extraordinary costs to the vigorous enforcement of our drug laws, both financial and social," Franke said. "We owe it to ourselves to make sure that we are accomplishing something that is worth the cost." The obvious costs include law enforcement and incarceration, Franke said. Less easily measured is the effect the war on drugs has in neighborhoods targeted by police for extra effort, where "young people are growing up being frisked," he said. Constitutional concerns "Our efforts to curtail drug dealing have had a dramatic effect on Fourth Amendment rights and on the relationship between police and the community," Franke said. "The sense of confrontation between law enforcement officers and citizens in drug-trafficking areas is just one of the costs of the war on drugs." Franke added, though, "You don't know what things might be like if we weren't doing this." McCann agreed. "The people being prosecuted are only a fraction of the people out there doing this," McCann said. "How many more are out there, who knows?" While the use of heroin, OxyContin and Ecstasy increased in the Milwaukee area in recent years, cocaine - particularly crack cocaine - remains the most problematic drug in the city, according to narcotics investigators. "Don't forget, this is all about addiction," Slamka said. "You can't preach enforcement as the sole answer. "You need treatment." McCann noted that it's addicts' demand that keeps drug dealers in business. "There are proposals now to cut back on treatment," McCann said. "In my opinion, that's a mistake. "You've got a demand problem, and you've got to deal with that, too." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh