Pubdate: Thu, 14 Feb 2002
Source: The Post and Courier (SC)
Copyright: 2002 Evening Post Publishing Co.
Contact:   http://www.charleston.net/index.html
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567

CHARLESTON DRUG DEALERS, BEWARE

Tuesday's "Operation Dragnet" sweep reaffirms an important message: Drug 
dealers can no longer assume that any neighborhood within the city of 
Charleston offers a safe haven from police disruption of their insidious 
business. That's bad news for lawbreakers, good news for the law-abiding.

That doesn't mean there's any instant solution to the long-term problem of 
drug-infested neighborhoods, here or anywhere else in America. Tuesday's 
raids, aimed at 37 suspects, won't permanently shut down the illicit drug 
trade in Charleston. After last year's "Operation Mayday," new dope 
peddlers eventually replaced the suspects rounded up in that massive, 
coordinated operation by federal and local authorities. The pattern is 
likely to be repeated in the wake of "Operation Dragnet."

Yet theoretical debates over drug-war tactics can't mask the grim reality 
of neighborhoods virtually held hostage by dope dealers who dominate their 
streets and fight turf wars for high profits, at times killing innocent 
bystanders in the bloody process. The expectation that the drug trade will 
make a comeback in the neighborhoods that police raided Tuesday must be 
matched by the expectation that the long arm of the law will make a 
comeback of its own.

Those drug dealers don't just have to worry about the police. They have to 
worry about a united community front against them.

Residents of Charleston's East Side have courageously resisted the bullying 
criminals who once ruled their streets. A group of concerned neighbors gave 
the mayor's office a map of dope-traffic zones, videotaped and alerted 
authorities of illegal activity, confronted dealers and even copied down 
license plates. The authorities, who long have been asking for more 
community cooperation in the difficult task of cleaning up crime-ridden 
neighborhoods, responded with "Operation Mayday."

The city police responded to community needs again Tuesday with "Operation 
Dragnet." That response serves notice that in every corner of this city, 
the risks of illegal drug trafficking include vigilant law enforcement.

No silver bullet exists for permanently ridding our communities of the 
debilitating drug-traffic social plague. But Charleston is demonstrating an 
encouraging resolve to stay the course in this protracted struggle.
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