Pubdate: Fri, 25 Jul 2003 Source: Times-Herald, The (CA) Copyright: 2003 The Times-Herald Contact: http://www.timesheraldonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/993 Author: J. M. Brown DRUGS PRESENT LONG-TERM WOES FOR POLICE, CITY Although crime in Vallejo is down overall this year, elected officials, police and citizen crimefighters agree the city will see long-lasting progress only when its widespread drug problem is controlled. According to figures released recently by the FBI, major crime in Vallejo for the first half of 2003 decreased in all categories except homicide, as compared to the same time frame in 2002. City officials said the drop bucks an overall Bay Area trend of increasing crime rates. Vallejo showed the biggest improvement in the number of assault cases, which were down 21 percent from 385 in the first half of 2002 to 284 so far this year. Burglary and larceny dropped 18 percent and 14 percent, respectively, while the number of rapes was down 5 percent, or just one from the 21 incidents reported last year. Robbery was cut by 4 percent. Drug-related arrests are not recorded by the FBI as part of its general crime figures although substance abuse has a significant impact on the number of other crimes committed, police say. Users steal, assault and commit other crimes to get drug money. "Drugs in any town brings upon its own type of crime," said Robert Noyes, president of the Vallejo chapter of Crimestoppers. Sgt. Vic Massenkoff, a police patrol supervisor, said the best way to measure a city's overall safety is to examine its drug problem, which he said continues to improve in Vallejo. "Compared to Vallejo 10 or 15 years ago, it's a night and day improvement," Massenkoff said. "We have to keep working on it or we'll fall back into some of those patterns." Police statistics on drug-related incidents were not immediately available, but daily arrest reports show patrol officers and the more undercover Crime Suppression Unit make thousands of drug arrests annually. "It's definitely one of our most stubborn problems," Massenkoff said of efforts to curb methamphetamine and cocaine deals. "We've seen quite a lot of crime is associated with street-level drug activity." With the mounting state budget deficit threatening possible cuts to municipal police forces, battling crime, specifically drugs, could prove even more difficult. Police say dope dealers are sophisticated and users are sneaky. Some dealers hide drugs in their mouths and buttocks and employ "spotters" with cell phones to watch the streets for approaching cops. "Honestly, I don't think the Vallejo Police Department or the L.A. police or the San Francisco police are equipped right now to stop the drugs," Noyes said, adding that laying off police as a result of budget cuts will send crime soaring. "The bad guy is going to understand." That's where Noyes said good citizenship comes into play. In recent years, police say neighborhood crime watchers have been more vigorously reporting suspicious behavior, which helps them keep on top of mapping where drug transactions are most prevalent. "There are a number of neighborhoods where the folks felt they were held hostage by criminal activity," Massenkoff said. Drug abuse specialist, Jeannie Villarreal, agreed that narcotics use often directly leads to other crime as desperate users look for ways to support their habit. But she and other recovering addicts continue to advocate for treatment, not additional prison time, for offenders. Up to 85 percent of those released from prison have a substance abuse addiction, said Villarreal, a project coordinator for the city's anti-drug program, Fighting Back Partnership. "For our society to keep locking these people away without treatment .. is ignoring the underlying factor for why they're committing the crime," Villarreal said. While happy about the overall decreasing crime trend in Vallejo, Mayor Tony Intintoli Jr. acknowledged how drug use sparks criminal activity. "So much of it is drug related," the mayor said. "Unless we can make an impact, we're going to have this problem (of crime.)" - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake