Pubdate: Sat, 21 Jun 2003 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 The London Free Press a division of Sun Media Corporation. Contact: http://www.lfpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Kelly Pedro Note: In keeping with MAP's standards of not posting new items that persecute people in the media who have been only arrested but not found guilty by any court, a standard that does not necessarly protect those in public office or public figures; two sidebars, Who's Charged and Who Police Are Still Seeking, listing 52 and 29 people by name and age, are not included below. Sidebars are short, often boxed, auxiliary news stories that are printed alongside a longer article and that typically present additional, contrasting, or late-breaking news. CHASING LIFE-SHATTERING CRACK A Crack Cocaine Investigation Revealed A Much Bigger Problem Than Police Imagined. London police knew there was a crack cocaine problem in the area around Dundas and Ontario streets, an otherwise quiet neighbourhood just east of downtown. But the problem was much bigger than they thought. What started out as a short-term investigation targeting known dealers ballooned into Project Impact, an intensive five-month undercover operation that led to charges against 52 persons in the area over the last week. At stake is the future of the neighbourhood, because crack, one of the most addictive drugs available on the street, destroys families and contributes to prostitution, burglary and petty theft, police say. Police came across one user during the investigation whose crack addiction cost him his $200,000 west London home. By the time police found him, he was living in a Dundas Street hotel. "A $200,000-plus home all gone -- all for crack," said one officer. What's more, during Project Impact, three shootings were linked to drug trafficking in the area, one only steps from where London police blitzed dealers last week. In a rare interview, an undercover London police officer agreed to speak to The Free Press on the condition his identity be protected. "Initially, we certainly knew there was a problem," says the officer who headed up Project Impact. "Although we had intelligence, spending time in the area we learned the problem was larger than we originally thought." The crackdown will mean drastic changes for residents in the area. Many of the prostitutes dealing crack to supplement their income are now in custody. The users, from the homeless to highly paid professionals who lost their jobs and families because of their addiction, have moved elsewhere. On the stretch of Dundas Street near Western Fair, crack cocaine has been the scourge of residents who live in historic homes on the otherwise quiet and leafy streets nearby. "In a situation like Dundas and Ontario, the vast majority of people who live in the neighbourhood are not drug users, are not traffickers and have a right to live there in peace," said the detective. Fred Tranquilli, the Ward 3 council member who represents the area, agrees. "The people who live in the community are certainly hard-working upstanding families," he says. "If people from other parts of the city decide they're going to take up a spot to do business in your neighbourhood, there's not a whole lot you can do about it besides ask police for help." Area residents are often witnesses to the crime that happens in a neighbourhood ridden with mercenary crack dealers, desperate prostitutes and hyped-up users. During the recent raids, London police, with help from the OPP and RCMP, searched six homes and businesses on Dundas between Ontario and Quebec streets. So far, 57 people have been charged, most with trafficking offences. Another 29 are still wanted by police. Most area businesses declined to talk about the raids and the impact they've had on the neighbourhood. But police say the situation has greatly improved. "We're not naive to think there's not still crack in the city to be purchased, but for the people at Dundas and Ontario, they can go outside and know they're not going to encounter the same situation as they did in the past," the detective said. Tranquilli said he fears the one-time sweep won't change anything unless a long-term strategy is in place. But the raids last week are a step in the right direction, said Paul Whitehead, a University of Western sociology professor. "One of the things that's going to be very important is the extent to which the prosecutions are successful," said Whitehead, referring to the dealers who have been charged. It wasn't long ago, he noted, that police raided body-rub parlours, charging 38 people, only to see those charges withdrawn earlier this year because prosecuting attorneys said they didn't have enough evidence to convict. Tranquilli thinks surveillance cameras should be considered. "That type of activity -- drug dealing and prostitution -- I think would be impacted if people knew there were surveillance cameras and they were monitoring licence plates and activities," he said. Addicts who have lost everything -- sometimes spending as much as $2,000 a day feeding their addiction -- often turn to prostitution, robbery and petty theft to score a "slice of pie," a common phrase used for crack because of the way it's manufactured. "With that kind of expense, it doesn't take long for people to lose their homes, cars, and certainly when you lose those things you lose your family," said the undercover London detective. A high from crack lasts an hour at most, police say. Addicts come out of the high feeling paranoid and a strong urge for more drugs. "The addicts themselves will tell you they call it 'chasing the high.' They will chase the high for days on end and they'll do nothing except go from one piece of crack to another," the detective said. "We estimate that when people are on a crack run, they would administer the drug three times an hour," said Linda Sibley, executive director of Alcohol and Drug Services of Thames Valley. "When they (addicts) are on a run . . . it can be a full-time preoccupation. It can consume a lot of your day getting the money to do the drug, getting the drug and going somewhere to use it." Crack is so highly addictive in part because it's smoked, meaning it gets into an addict's system quickly, starting with the lungs and spreading to the brain. "The faster you get high the faster you also lose your high, so the need to use again happens more quickly," Sibley said. Police say next to methamphetamine, crack is the hardest drug addiction to break. Crack started showing up on the streets of New York City in the late 1980s and early 1990s. There was no crack in London in 1990 until the latter part of the year, police say. Since then it has become prevalent, spreading to every corner of the city. It is now one of the most common illegal drugs in the province. But police say the crack problem in the city is not out of control. "It's certainly not a situation where people need to be running for the hills because we have a huge crack problem," the London detective said. Last year, police seized more than $180,000 worth of crack, about 900 grams. Area addiction counsellors say crack cocaine is in the top five addictions reported. It used to be in the top three, behind alcohol and marijuana, before gambling took its place two years ago. [sidebar] A HIGH FROM CRACK COCAINE IS DIFFERENT FROM MARIJUANA - - For about $40, addicts can get one quarter grams of crack. - - The high lasts an hour at most. - - Users come out of the high feeling paranoid and a strong urge to use again. - - For $10, users can get one gram of marijuana. - - Depending on its potency, the high lasts between two and five hours. - - Users come out of the high feeling mellow and tired. [sidebar] FACTS ABOUT CRACK - - It's one of the most addictive drugs available on the street. - - Crack cocaine comes from powder cocaine. - - It's made using a mixture of cocaine, baking soda and water. - - The solution is boiled and a solid substance separates from the boiling mixture. - - The solid substance, crack cocaine, is removed and dried. - - It's then broken or cut into "rocks," each weighing between one-tenth and one-half a gram. - - Users put a piece of crack in a pipe, most of which are homemade, light it and smoke it. - - Crack got its name because when you smoke it, it makes a cracking sound. - - Smoking crack is what makes it so addictive since the high is instantaneous. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart