Pubdate: Fri, 14 Mar 2003 Source: Tribune Review (Pittsburgh, PA) Copyright: 2003 Tribune-Review Publishing Co. Contact: http://triblive.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/460 Author: Ernie Batista Note: The writer was assistant special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration office in Pittsburgh. He is retired and lives in Cranberry Township. DRUG CULTURE NOT WORTHY OF COMPASSION Columnist Dimitri Vassilaros's criticism ("Priorities go to pot in bong bust," March 2) of the Drug Enforcement Administration's Operation Pipe Dreams, which focused on the sale of illegal drug paraphernalia, compelled me to try to provide him with a more in-depth perspective of the detrimental affects and misery caused by drug trafficking and drug abuse on the citizens of our nation. Drugs equals money, money equals power. Drug money funds not only the gangs committing the drive-by shootings in many neighborhoods but also international terrorists, drug lords and narco-governments. The DEA has conducted counterdrug operations against international terrorist organizations long before they became household names. Drugs are just another weapon of mass destruction. Thousands die each year in the United States due to the terror of drugs. MULTILEVEL ATTACK The DEA's strategy has always been to attack drug trafficking organizations at every level in order to make it more difficult for them to operate here or overseas. The DEA, in partnership with foreign and U.S. law enforcement agencies and prosecutors, has attacked the drug organizations' production operations, methods of transportation, communication and distribution networks, money-laundering methods and also attempted to seize the assets generated from their ill-gotten gains. Not to mention incarcerating as many major drug dealers as possible. Drug organizations depend on others to provide resources and material to produce drugs, transport, distribute and use them. Whether you provide the chemicals to produce the drugs, the airplanes, ships and cars to transport them, the people to sell them, the businesses to launder drug proceeds, the equipment to use them or the people to consume them, you are a member of the drug organization. Whatever your role is in the drug chain, your actions are enabling drug lords and terrorists to exist, profit, and commit atrocities. By working together to attack the various links, we attempt to make drug trafficking more costly and problematic for drug organizations. ANOTHER TOOL "Operation Pipe Dreams" has removed yet another tool from the drug dealers' toolbox. Without the little plastic bags or other items sold in paraphernalia shops, the street dealer has a difficult time distributing drugs and drug users have a difficult time using drugs. Remember that the kids buying heroin today in western Pennsylvania are buying "stamp bags" of heroin. Quantities of crack cocaine, cocaine, marijuana and methamphetamine are weighed on scales and sold in "knots" or Baggies. Many teenagers buy marker pens designed to conceal drugs - making it easy to use drugs while at school. The items sold at paraphernalia stores promote drug use, pure and simple. No one smokes tobacco from a bong. For that matter, most of the products sold at a paraphernalia shop do not have any legal household applications. Some shop owners also provide cutting agents in pre-measured amounts for the drug dealers wanting to increase their profits by diluting the purity of the drugs being sold. Easily influenced teenagers visiting paraphernalia shops are exposed to the "tools of the trade" of drug abuse in an environment that many teenagers consider "cool." The Internet is widely used to sell drug paraphernalia and other drug- related products worldwide. Paraphernalia shops are driven by profit and have no interest in the welfare, safety and health of our children. They could care less. They are making millions of dollars and I seriously doubt that many are paying taxes on their income. Should law enforcement consider these businesses harmless and look the other way? During the current epidemic of heroin and methamphetamine addiction in western Pennsylvania should we allow them to continue to promote drug use under our noses in violation of U.S. laws? Is that what the parents of the kids that have been drawn into drug addiction expect law enforcement to do? I seriously doubt it. CAN THE CHEAP SHOTS Instead of being the targets of cheap shots, DEA, and other federal, state and local law enforcement agencies, as well as the state and federal prosecutors should be commended for their efforts in our region. They are risking their lives and doing their best to make a difference. They have taken a comprehensive local and global approach against drug organizations in an effort to cripple the marketing and distribution of drugs in Pittsburgh and throughout the nation. Their efforts have included the initiation of a worldwide investigation and the arrest in Spain of the world's most prolific supplier of Ecstasy, followed by the arrests of the major Ecstasy dealers in Pittsburgh, the recent arrests of Pittsburgh's major heroin dealers and the arrests of unscrupulous doctors and pharmacists who provide prescription drugs such as Oxycontin, Percocet and other opiates for resale to drug abusers. Instead of showing compassion for those who promote drug use, I would strongly recommend that Mr. Vassilaros visit a drug treatment center and talk to the kids who are engaged in the desperate struggle of their lives trying to rid their bodies of heroin and other drugs. Ask them what they think of drugs, paraphernalia and anything else associated with the substance that is stealing their hope, their future and their lives. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh