Pubdate: Tue, 19 Nov 2002 Source: Post and Courier, The (Charleston, SC) Copyright: 2002 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 Author: Glenn Smith, Of The Post and Courier Staff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) N. CHARLESTON SWEEP SEEKS ELUSIVE OFFENDERS Operation Happy Holidays, Joined By Parole Agents, Looks For 'Cream Of The Crop' The interior lights of the squat, white home burned like a beacon in the pre-dawn darkness Monday as North Charleston Detective Cpl. Jerry Jellico escorted a dazed and disheveled young man in handcuffs past the splintered remains of the front door. Police went to the Meeting Street home shortly after 3 a.m. looking for a woman, who had an outstanding warrant for failing to return a rented videotape. Officers found neither the woman nor the missing video, but they did spot a half-dressed man rushing to the kitchen sink to feed a handful of marijuana into the garbage disposal. Officers forced their way in and stopped the man. A short time later, they obtained a search warrant and found nearly three pounds of marijuana and a bundle of cash inside the house, said Detective Lt. George Tetanich. The incident provided North Charleston police and state probation and parole agents an unexpected bonus as they swept the city during a sprawling and ambitious hunt for nearly 200 people named in outstanding warrants. The effort, dubbed Operation Happy Holidays, was the largest undertaking of its kind in North Charleston and targeted suspects wanted for crimes ranging from disorderly conduct and petit larceny to assault and battery with intent to kill and murder. Police culled the list from some 4,000 active warrants on file with the department, concentrating on the most dangerous suspects as well as those who had evaded past efforts to bring them to justice, said Sgt. Steve Shephard, who oversees the department's warrants unit. "We're just taking the cream of the crop," he said. Working in teams of four or five, about 70 officers from North Charleston police, probation and parole, the FBI's Charleston Safe Streets Task Force and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms swarmed across the city armed with warrants, mug shots and maps highlighting possible addresses for their quarry. The warrants were dated from 1998 to the present. By the end of the five-hour operation, officers had attempted to serve about 100 warrants and had rounded up 36 suspects, including people charged with armed robbery, first-degree burglary and criminal sexual conduct with a minor, said Lt. Jack Kornahrens. Police learned three more suspects were in prison and one man wanted on six forgery warrants had died, he said. "Realistically, we were looking at closer to 20 (arrests)," he said. "So we've exceeded our expectations." As temperatures hovered in the mid-30s, police gathered for a final briefing shortly before 3 a.m. at North Charleston's municipal court complex. Seated on benches normally reserved for offenders, they sipped coffee as supervisors laid out plans for the sweep and assembled 11 teams to cover specified zones within the city. "For all the mornings, we had to pick the coldest one yet. I guess that's our luck," said Detective Capt. William Barfield, drawing light laughter from the crowd. "But thank you for coming. And remember, be safe out there." Soon, small caravans of unmarked cruisers pulled out and headed for their assigned neighborhoods, striking quickly while most residents slept. Along the way, there were successes and a number of false hits. On Piedmont Avenue, a team of officers fanned out and circled a battered mobile home at the end of a crowded trailer park where a man wanted in connection with a shooting reportedly lived. A chorus of nearby dogs barked and yelped as officers banged on the front door and announced their presence. Anxious seconds passed as police waited for someone to answer. Finally, a light came on and the door swung open. A woman talked quietly to the officers for a moment, and then they walked back to their cars. The suspect was no longer there. A short time later, another team found a woman in a weathered home along Arbutus Avenue who was wanted for probation violations. Dressed in a T-shirt, she shivered beneath a bare light bulb as cold air seeped through the open front door while officers handcuffed and shackled her. As she was led to a waiting prisoner transport van, a television reporter asked her if she was worried about the trouble she was in. "I been in trouble all my life," she said with a hoarse cackle. Kornahrens said he suspects more fugitives will surrender to authorities as word of the operation spreads in the community. Police also are planning similar operations in the coming months to track down more wanted suspects, he said. The operation, the largest undertaking of its kind in North Charleston, grew out of informal talks between police and state Department of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services agents following an Oct. 10 incident in which a man wanted for probation and parole violations shot at two North Charleston officers at a Sumner Avenue mobile home park. Both agencies deal with many of the same offenders and were looking for ways to maximize their effectiveness in the face of budget and manpower constraints, Barfield said. In mid-September, there were 28 vacancies in the police department. All state agencies are bracing for mid-year cuts in the face of a projected revenue shortfall of at least $331 million. North Charleston police have only two-full-time officers dedicated to serving the thousands of warrants on file with the department. Specialty teams often conduct smaller scale round-ups, and detectives and uniform officers regularly check suspects they encounter for outstanding warrants. But offenders can and do elude capture. Lynne Moldenhauer, the agent in charge of probation and parole in the Charleston area, said her agency was concerned about the amount of violent crime in the city and recognized that a large percentage of the 4,200 people the agency oversees in Charleston County live in North Charleston. "There have been a lot of incidents coming out of our people," she said. "We just saw the need for greater collaboration." North Charleston has had 16 of the county's 34 homicides this year. In 2001, there were 413 armed robberies in the city, a six-year high. The 1,377 burglaries recorded were the most since 1997, according to department statistics. In the past year or so, North Charleston police have worked to build stronger partnerships with other local, state and federal agencies to deliver a bigger punch to their efforts to combat crime. Most recently, police teamed with the Drug Enforcement Administration for an eight-month investigation that led to an August raid targeting 30 suspected mid-to upper-level crack cocaine suppliers in the city. The goal of Monday's operation was three-fold: to clear outstanding cases, send a message that police were serious about enforcing warrants for all offenses and try to reduce crime as the holiday season approaches, Barfield said. Around the holidays, money problems and desperation seem to spark more crime, he said. In 2001, North Charleston saw the number of armed robberies increase from an average of 34 per month to 54 in December. The city averaged 80-95 burglaries each month, but recorded between 123 and 130 during the last two months of the year, said Cpl. Karen Cordray, head of the department's crime analysis unit. "We're trying to reduce that by eliminating from the streets some of the would-be criminals who often commit these types of crimes," Barfield said. Working in a mobile command post at the court complex, a police dispatcher tracked Monday's events while other support personnel fingerprinted, photographed and processed the suspects. Municipal Court Judge David Bowers arrived before dawn to conduct bail hearings for suspects charged with municipal offenses. He also brought along a large batch of cookies for the officers, courtesy of his wife. Sheriff's office personnel also were on hand to ferry those charged with felony offenses to the county jail for bail hearings before Magistrate Jack Guedalia. As the sun rose over the city, the operation was suspended shortly after 8 a.m. A young man on Grayson Street was among the last arrested. He was wanted on a warrant for disorderly conduct. As police escorted him to a waiting cruiser, the man's irritated mother asked Detective Sgt. Ken Hagge why police weren't out arresting murder suspects instead. "Tell us where they are, ma'am, and we'll be happy to pick them up, too," he replied. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D