Pubdate: Fri, 29 Nov 2002 Source: Bulletin, The (OR) Copyright: 2002 Western Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.bendbulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/62 Author: Tom Peterson COUNTY KEEPS UP INTENSE DRUG WAR Detectives took 14 pounds of methamphetamine off the streets in Central Oregon from July 2001 through June 2002, said a Deschutes County Sheriff's captain, but the amount seized was far less than what is being produced and/or distributed in the area. The Office of National Drug Control Policy designated Deschutes County a high-intensity drug trafficking area in 1999. The designation opens the area up to additional money to fight drugs. So far, Deschutes County has received more than $900,000 to combat drugs in Central Oregon. But even with $300,000 in federal dollars being funneled into the Central Oregon Drug Enforcement (CODE) team annually, police struggle to keep up. "Our biggest problem is meth," said Deschutes County Sheriff's Capt. Randy Wight. He said Central Oregon lends itself to small meth labs because they are easier to conceal in areas with wide-open public lands as well as large-acre properties. From July 2001 through June 2002, the drug team made up of detectives from law enforcement agencies in Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties, arrested 280 individuals on charges of manufacture and or distribution of meth. Those 200 cases also involved people being charged with 90 counts of child neglect and or endangering the welfare of a minor. That's because children were present when the CODE team busted the meth labs. The drug team also wrote 40 search warrants and seized the following during the same time period: * 400 pounds of marijuana * 17 grams of ecstasy -- an amphetamine with a hallucinogenic effect. * 11 grams psilocybin mushrooms * 16 grams ephedrine - the main ingredient in methamphetamine * 10 grams hashish * 10 grams opium "It (federal money) is a major enhancement on our ability to do investigations," Wight said. "We would be hard pressed to to the kind of work we've been doing without it." Of the $362,000 sent to Deschutes County annually, about $212,000 buys surveillance and office equipment, pays detectives overtime and pays rent on CODE's offices. Salaries for the 15 detectives at CODE are paid through their own law enforcement agencies. The remaining $150,000 pays for the prosecution of drug crimes. Deschutes County Deputy District Attorney Steve Gunnels has been appointed a special assistant to the United States Attorney to prosecute drug cases in federal court. Federal convictions tend to mean more time behind bars. Gunnels said the $150,000 pays his salary and benefits as well as those of his assistant. So far, Gunnels has convicted two people in federal court for delivery of methamphetamine: * Luis Alberto Caro, 23, of Salem delivered a total of 1=80 pounds of meth in three drug buys with CODE in Deschutes County in July and August of 2001, Gunnels said. He was sentenced to five years and 10 months in federal prison in August for the distribution of meth. * Israel Duvan Velazquez was arrested for delivering one pound of methamphetamine in a drug buy with CODE in August 2001. He was also sentenced to five years and 10 months in federal prison in August for distribution. Both men were illegally in the country and will be deported to Mexico at the end of their prison terms. A third man, Shane Jeffery Clapp, 28, has pleaded guilty to delivering more than a pound of cocaine in a CODE investigation in February. Gunnels said his sentencing has been set for January, and he expects Clapp to get several years in federal prison for distributing the cocaine. In addition, Gunnels said he has three other cases that he is seeking to prosecute at the federal level. He also prosecutes drug cases at the state level and currently has about 60 pending. "There is a real problem with meth, and it is getting worse even than when I started two years ago," Gunnels said. He also said the federal funding for his position as well as CODE does have an impact. "Undoubtedly there is connection between meth use and violent crime. "People steal to pay for meth. And when they are high on it, they hurt other people as well as themselves." - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)