Pubdate: Sun, 12 Oct 2003 Source: Daily Item (PA) Copyright: 2003 The Daily Item Contact: http://www.dailyitem.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1045 SMALL VICTORIES With 12 suspected drug dealers in jail and four on the run, one may think the Central Susquehanna Valley's law enforcement community may have scored a major victory in the war on drugs. It was touted that way by Attorney General Mike Fisher and other officials on Thursday when they held a news conference to announce the arrests. In many ways, the arrests may be a victory. If the allegations prove true in court, those charged are responsible for bringing $2 million worth of cocaine, heroin, ecstasy and marijuana into the Valley in the last three years. The coordinated police work of a dozen local police departments and state agencies deserves praise for breaking up such a drug ring with alleged connections to Reading and New York. But there is a certain "show-and-tell" aspect to these big drug bust announcements. Authorities can show us pictures of those arrested, and tell us about their alleged crimes, but the big picture remains elusive. For every drug dealer caught, there are perhaps dozens free. And for every drug dealer free, there are perhaps dozens of drug users creating a demand - and a lucrative market. The arrests should put a crimp in the supply of illegal drugs to the area. But a crimp is not a shut-off valve. Drugs will continue to pour into the Valley as long as there is a market for them. And the market will continue to exist as long as the false allure of illegal drugs continues to overpower the anti-drug messages of families, schools and communities. The arrests may have been a small victory, but there are many more battles, on many more fronts, to be fought. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin