Pubdate: Wed, 07 May 2003 Source: Kentucky Post (KY) Copyright: 2003 Kentucky Post Contact: http://www.kypost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/661 Author: Shelly Whitehead DRUG STRIKE FORCE WINS ACCREDITATION Agency polishes image Northern Kentucky Drug Strike Force Director Jim Paine jokes that the words "long troubled" so often preceded references to his agency that he wondered if they might become part of the official name one day. But Paine hopes a hard-won distinction the drug-fighting force recently won will elevate the 25-year-old agency's image in the eyes of local residents and law enforcement. In August, the four-county drug enforcement organization will become the first regional drug enforcement unit in the state to receive official accreditation from the Kentucky Association of Chiefs of Police. Paine hopes the groundbreaking achievement will separate the agency from its leadership and operational problems of the past. "A big part of my responsibility when I got here was to re-establish those relationships with local and federal agencies, Paine said. "I had to go out and sell the strike force again -- that it was professionally run and professionally staffed. "This allowed us the opportunity to take a good look at the agency and see what we're doing right and what we're doing wrong and to get our ducks in a row, so to speak." Paine said the accreditation process for the police chief's organization took more than a year, but ultimately strengthened the strike force, which now serves Boone, Kenton, Campbell and Grant counties. He said to meet each of the 154 required standards, the agency was forced to develop written policies and procedures and even hone its mission of interrupting and curtailing the flow of illegal drug use into the region. The process, Paine said, enhanced the image of the strike force among the 34 police departments it depends on to accomplish its mission. The Boone County Sheriff's Department, which for several years supplied two officers to the strike force, added a third last year. "I think they've become much more effective throughout the period that I've been here -- so that with the manpower they now have and the quality of manpower they have now, the Northern Kentucky Drug Strike Force has evolved into a credible organization," said Maj. Jack Banks, crime bureau commander for the sheriff's department, one of seven agencies which loan officers to the strike force. From its inception as the Northern Kentucky Narcotics Enforcement Unit in 1978, the organization was beset with financial and administrative problems. In 1992, a strike force narcotics officer resigned after admitting he lied to a judge to obtain a search warrant. That was followed by a continual turnover in leadership, including three directors and as many interim directors before Paine was hired in 2001. One of those directors, Daniel Steers, resigned after an employee accused him of sexual harassment, an allegation that Steers said "damaged the internal structure of the unit." The problems weakened confidence in the force among law enforcement in Boone, Campbell and Kenton counties, threatening their continued support of the agency. The force is funded through a federal grant that requires a 25 percent match from participating counties. Strike force staff is made up of narcotics officers "on loan" from Northern Kentucky city and county police forces. Since he signed on, Paine, a former Utah police chief, has nearly doubled the number of agents to 11 and added Grant County to the coverage area. Accreditation builds on that good faith, Paine says, by increasing the agency's accountability and professionalism and decreasing its liability risk in one of the most litigious areas of law enforcement. Kentucky Police Chiefs Association Accreditation Manager Mike Bischoff praised the agency's performance. "With a drug strike force, the main thing is to incorporate all the national standards into their property room,'' he said. "And they did establish their own policies and procedures -- which promotes accountability in the people that work there and enhances the reputation of the agency." Well-defined procedures also help the community accurately measure both strike force performance and community drug problems by defining how drug seizures are measured and what kinds of investigations are included in annual case counts. In the past, Paine said the definition of an open case sometimes changed with the agency's director, making it difficult to draw any conclusions from performance data much before 2001. Nonetheless, the data shows that open cases and arrests have increased since 1997. Sharp increases are reported in seizures of key illegal drugs like cocaine, crack, heroin, marijuana, methamphetamines, and in drug labs busted over the last six years. In fact, the total heroin and drug lab seizures from the first four months of this year have already topped the number for all of last year. Accreditation, an ongoing process renewed every five years, works to continue the agency's professional momentum, Bischoff said. The process already appears to be paying off. Since January, both Newport and Highland Heights police have loaned officers to the strike force, Paine said. And Alexandria police are loaning officers as part of a short-term intern program. Ultimately, more agents leads to increased arrests and drug and property seizures, which produce more money and community support. In other words, success breeds greater success. "They've had the opportunity to have some sizable seizures that have enabled the unit to upgrade themselves from working with secondhand equipment they have a hard time working with to a pretty good range of equipment," said Campbell County Police Chief David Sandfoss, whose department has loaned two officers to the strike force. "But good leadership is the key to all this. -- You still have to have the best people driving the boat." As news of this first strike force accreditation has spread, Bischoff said other Kentucky strike force leaders have contacted him to begin their accreditation efforts. Paine, who with his staff helped to establish the framework for accreditation of such units, recommends the process highly. "It lets us know we are doing things the right way," he said. "It helps us to stay focused on what we're doing. But it's not something that once you achieve it you're done with. -- It's really an ongoing self-assessment program." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh