Pubdate: Tue, 25 Feb 2003 Source: Idaho State Journal (ID) Copyright: 2003 Idaho State Journal Contact: http://www.journalnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/936 Author: Sean Ellis RAIDS SHUT 3 STORES Feds Seize Alleged Drug Devices In Pocatello POCATELLO - Federal authorities and local police raided and shut down three Pocatello businesses Monday in conjunction with a national crackdown on the sale of drug paraphernalia. "We can't go out preaching, 'Say no to drugs,' without taking these types of instruments off the street," Thomas O'Brien, a spokesman with the Drug Enforcement Administration office in Seattle, said during a press conference in Pocatello. A similar press conference was held in Boise and Attorney General John Ashcroft and heads of several federal agencies held a related news conference in Washington. Federal authorities indicted 55 people on charges of trafficking in illegal drug paraphernalia, using both traditional stores and the Internet. In coordinated raids on Monday, officials confiscated thousands of tons of paraphernalia from companies boasting up to $50 million in annual sales. The charges are the culmination of two nationwide investigations code-named Operation Pipe Dreams and Operation Headhunter and include indictments against national distributors of drug paraphernalia and businesses nationwide. In Pocatello, DEA representatives, U.S. Marshals and local police agencies confiscated alleged drug paraphernalia from Pegasus Book Store, 246 W. Center St., Smokey's Den, 145 S. Third Ave., and 20 After 4, 218 N. Main St. Arrested in Pocatello were Pegasus employee Michelle Darlene Harrison; Damon M. Bosquez, manager of Smokey's; Bryan Jason Clum and Travis Clifton Shafer, co-owners of 20 After 4, and Thomas Owen Calvin, an employee of the store. In Idaho Falls, Charisma and Shadow Domain were raided, as were stores in Burley, Twin Falls, Mountain Home and Boise. Seventeen owners and employees of so-called "head shops" in Idaho and eastern Oregon were arrested and accused of offering to sell drug paraphernalia to undercover agents. Those charged face up to three years in prison and maximum fines of $250,000 for each count. Defendants were charged with conspiracy to sell and offering to sell types of drug paraphernalia to undercover agents. All the indictments seek forfeiture of the illegal paraphernalia and the proceeds from its sale. According to federal law, drug paraphernalia is defined as any equipment, product or material primarily intended for use in processing, preparing, injecting, ingesting or inhaling illegal drugs. According to police, many of the items were disguised as common objects such as highlighter pens, lipstick pagers and credit cards to elude detection as drug paraphernalia and were marketed using code names and symbols. They can include clay pipes, water pipes, kits to conceal drug use in urine tests, chillums, bongs and hookahs. A bong is a sealed chamber partially filled with water, used to draw marijuana smoke deeply into the lungs; a chillum is a narrow funnel typically made out of glass or clay, used to smoke marijuana; a hookah is a water pipe with flexible tubes extending from the main chamber to multiple mouth pieces. Ashcroft said the sale of drug paraphernalia has exploded on the Internet, making it easier for teenagers and young adults to buy it. "Quite simply, the illegal drug paraphernalia industry has invaded the homes of families across the country without their knowledge," Ashcroft said in a statement. "This illegal, billion-dollar industry will no longer be ignored by law enforcement." "People selling drug paraphernalia are in essence no different than drug dealers," said Acting DEA Administrator John Brown. "They are as much a part of drug trafficking as silencers are a part of criminal homicide. "These criminals operate a multimillion-dollar enterprise, selling their paraphernalia in head shops, distributing out of huge warehouses, and using the worldwide Web as a worldwide paraphernalia market." "These aren't stores selling a few pipes here and there, nor are they selling legitimate tobacco-related products," U.S. Attorney Tom Moss said at the Boise news conference. "These are drug-oriented businesses, and they represent big money." "Drug paraphernalia with drug use is like having a gun and ammunition," O'Brien said. "You can't use the gun unless you have the ammunition." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D