Pubdate: Sun, 18 Jul 2004 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: 2004 The Observer Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/315 Website: http://www.observer.co.uk/ Author: Tony Thompson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) CRACK CRISIS Once restricted to a black and working-class urban base, crack cocaine is now smoked by people of all backgrounds - and with 45,000 users in London alone, it has become an epidemic, leaving violent crime and shattered lives in its wake. Tony Thompson reports The stocky black man in the heavy trench coat with an orange bandana tied around his head appears for the third time in 20 minutes. His circuit takes him all the way around the base of the four-storey block of flats. Sometimes he lingers at the stairwell; sometimes he spends a few moments lurking in the shadows that hide him from the main road; all the time he is watching. It's just after 11pm on Friday and the latest crack house to open on the sprawling Woodberry Down estate in Hackney, north London, is ready to trade. Straddling the Seven Sisters Road and consisting of 57 individual blocks, the estate is one of the most crack-infested areas of the country. Since the start of the year Hackney council, working alongside the Metropolitan police, has used the new anti-social behaviour legislation to shut down more than 100 crack houses, at least a dozen of them on the Woodberry. Yet despite such radical action, which involves arresting the tenant and sealing off the property so that no one can enter for at least six months, residents say the problem remains as bad as ever. 'These places close down but a couple of weeks, sometimes a couple of hours, later they open up somewhere else,' said one woman who asked not to be named. 'You can take away the supply but if the demand is still there the dealers will always have a reason to come back.' The man in the bandana is lookout for a crack house in a two-bedroom flat on the top floor of the block. From the opposite walkway you can see that the door to the flat is wide open and only a security grille blocks the way to the outside world. Visitors are few. Some stay just long enough for a quick handshake through the bars; others are invited inside, through the stark white hallway and into the living room. It is a scene being repeated across Britain. The use of crack cocaine is soaring to epidemic levels, fuelling a dramatic rise in violent street crime and driving the price down to a record low. Abuse of the drug has become so widespread that specialist police units targeting muggers, carjackers and petty criminals are arresting more crack addicts than heroin users. A study by the National Association of Probation Officers shows that crack users typically spend as much on drugs in a day as heroin addicts do in a week. Experts say the shift in patterns of drug use has affected the types of crimes being committed on the street. Heroin addicts, previously identified as being responsible for most property-related crime, traditionally fund their habits through burglary, breaking into parked cars, shoplifting and credit card fraud. Crack, however, leaves heavy users edgy, paranoid and dangerously desperate. They are more likely to get involved in violent, opportunist crimes such as mugging, mobile phone theft and carjacking. The problem is most acute in London, but Birmingham, Bristol, Manchester and Northampton have also recorded large increases in the numbers of users. There is also increasing evidence that the drug is spreading from its traditional user base, with addicts just as likely to be Asian, white or middle-class as to be black or working-class. For those working with crack users, one worrying development is the fact that there has been an increase in casual use of the drug. Casual users, who may take crack only at weekends or a couple of times a month, rarely come into contact with the treatment system and are not counted among the official statistics. 'Crack is a difficult drug to control,' says Maggie Telfer of the Bristol Drugs Project, 'but there are some users who will binge once or twice a month, perhaps for an entire weekend, but not at any other time. They manage to keep their addiction under control to some degree, but most users will have difficulty doing this for long. 'In Bristol the number of users has remained fairly steady for the past five years since crack first arrived and the core users are those who also take heroin. Drugs tend to work in cycles and the worry is that in 10 years' time we will see another explosion of crack users.' The use of crack on a casual basis falls outside most people's perception of the power of the drug but seems to be increasingly common. One user, writing on a forum for the crackcocaineincamden.co.uk website, which exposes the actions of local dealers, notes: 'I myself have been a crack user for quite a few years. I was brought up very well and never had to want for anything. I was exposed to crack by an ex-boyfriend in my late teens. Not everyone is the same and not all situations are the same. Not every crackhead robs and steals. Not every crackhead sells their body for their addiction. Not all crackheads are the ignorant and underprivileged. I've seen many people who are addicted and hold down a job, have families, even own businesses. The consequences are the same for everyone, though. And it depends on how far you let your addiction take you.' Overall drug seizures in England and Wales rose by 10 per cent in 2003, but the amount of crack cocaine seized during the same period more than doubled. While a recent estimate suggested there were around 45,000 crack users in London alone, most drug workers believe the true figure is far higher. Earlier this year the Metropolitan police revealed that cocaine seizures in the capital had rocketed 400 per cent in the last year, from 96kg to 360kg. Prostitution, long associated with the use of heroin, is now being fuelled by crack. One prostitute, Leanne, told The Observer : 'A couple of years back when I started on the game, all the girls were on brown, nothing else. Then the dealers starting selling what they called 'party packs' - a bag of smack and two free rocks. We all got hooked but, surprise surprise, once we did, the rocks started costing money. Now the only time people take brown is to help them come down.' Much of the crack trade is controlled by Yardie barons, many of whom come from Jamaica. One, Michael, said he was making UKP5,000 a week selling crack in Bristol before being arrested and deported to Kingston, Jamaica. 'I used to hang around in the Black and White Cafe in Bristol with a few guys I knew from Jamaica. Some of them used to sell stuff on the front line. The first time I went on the line, I bought just an ounce of black hash. I didn't want to get too deep. But within the space of an hour, that was sold out and I bought two more ounces and went back on the line. I just double my money in an hour. At the end of that first night I went home with about two ounces of black, an ounce of weed and UKP300 in my pocket. 'So I say to myself, yeah, a few hours and I get this! Come on, I'm going to do this full-time. And now a bit of greed got caught up in me. I said to myself, why not sell some cocaine? The first time I bought a sixteenth of an ounce, the smallest portion, for 150 quid. I got on the line at 5pm and the first man that came up to me five minutes later bought four grams. In the space of 10 minutes it was all sold out and I had made UKP150 on my UKP150. 'Then I started cooking crack and selling that. And that was the best business of all. The cash comes in so fast you don't know what to do with it all. I was making money, making money - four, five thousand a week. I had a flash car, flash clothes, flashy girls all over the place.' The Woodberry Down estate, one of several visited by The Observer as part of its investigation into the growth of the crack trade, is not an easy place for strangers to blend in. Roads that look as though they lead somewhere turn out to be dead ends, forcing a retreat along the same path. Non-residents stick out a mile and more often than not are treated with grave suspicion. That is why this and other estates are the perfect places to open up crack houses. According to a recent report by the Greater London Authority, there are three main types of crack house. The first is the fortified retail outlet which may also double as a crack factory. Here, doors are reinforced with steel bars to give the occupants as much time as possible to dispose of any evidence in the event of a police raid. Such crack houses are usually the most obvious and therefore the most heavily targeted. Then there are houses that have been taken over by dealers. The occupants are either elderly, mentally ill or simply too scared to resist. Some flats are owned by ex-addicts who have kicked the crack habit but are forced back into addiction by others. Like the property on the Woodberry, such flats may have good-quality furniture and fittings, at least to begin with, and blend in with their surroundings. The final type is the one which doubles as a brothel and allows users to exchange sexual services for drugs. All crack houses have the advantage of allowing users to smoke in a social set ting and of being available when regular street dealers are not. Yet while supporting the move to close as many crack houses as possible - last year the Met shut down 512 and this year it aims to top 600 - experts warn that the strategy may have only short-term benefits. According to the GLA report: 'Illicit drug markets are resistant to policing. Many buyers are intensely motivated to buy and sellers are equally motivated by profit. Research has identified various adaptations to, and perverse effects of, policing strategies. The most frequent response to policing is displacement - over place, time or mode of operation... Open markets tend to be transformed into closed ones by policing operations, or else are relocated. Where the police are successful in arresting sellers, this often results in substitution, where often someone who previously worked at a lower level in the process replaces the seller. In other words, policing can create promotion opportunities.' Crack houses are already changing the way they operate as a result of greater use of the new legislation. They generally carry far less stock than before (the last raid on the Woodberry Down estate resulted in only a single rock being seized) and are supplied regularly by drivers who patrol the streets, holding sufficient stock for dozens of houses. The Met plans to target these vehicles with a new squad later in the year. In the meantime, the focus remains on treatment. A spokesman for Turning Point, the national charity dealing with drug, alcohol and mental health problems, said it believed crack use was spreading dramatically. 'One of the problems is that users of crack cocaine tend to see treatment services as being suitable for heroin users but not for them. After all, there is no substitute drug like methadone that can be offered to them so they feel they have little to gain. We are developing new strategies to roll out across the country to try to encourage crack users to come in and use our services.' Attracting crack users to treatment centres is one thing; ensuring the facilities are there for them is quite another. Last month a criminal justice think-tank published a report which found that a shortage of residential drug treatment centres is leaving thousands of addicts without vital rehabilitation and undermining efforts to cut crime. The Rethinking Crime and Punishment group found there were up to half a million 'problem' drug users in England and Wales, but fewer than 2,000 places in residential treatment centres. Many addicts faced long waits for places at the centres, with some waiting up to eight months. Many were deterred from seeking help and were continuing to commit crimes, often ending up in prison. Others support a more radical view. John Messiter, who runs the crackcocaine incamden.co.uk site, agrees there has been a dramatic improvement in King's Cross since the use of antisocial behaviour legislation to close houses but says big problems remain elsewhere. 'Long term, we need a thorough and bold review of our drugs laws. Much of the harm from drug abuse comes from the criminality associated with it - the violence of dealers, the acquisitive crime of users, and the hazards of a product of unknown quality and purity. 'I don't accept that legalisation would be the cure-all solution that some claim. But then, I don't believe an easy answer exists. For me, it is a question of finding the least worst alternative, and I don't think that's what we have currently.' [sidebar] CRACK FACTS There are an estimated 200,000 regular users of crack cocaine in the UK. A further 475,000 are believed to be addicted to powder cocaine. The vast majority of drug users in the UK are white, but some studies say African-Caribbean communities use crack at the same level or slightly above that of white and Asian communities. Deaths from cocaine-related overdoses have doubled in the past five years and are now at record levels. Deaths rose from 96 in 2001 to 139 in 2002, the biggest year-on-year rise for five years. The effects of crack are similar to those of cocaine, although the 'hit' is more intense, does not last as long and is far harder to control. As well as losing their appetite, users often experience a feeling of well-being and confidence, as well as an indifference to pain and fatigue. While heroin users can be given methadone to control their cravings, no such substitute exists for crack cocaine. [sidebar] WHAT THE EXPERTS SAY: Mike Trace Former deputy drug tsar. Now chief executive of the Rehabilitation of Addicted Prisoners Trust 'Crack cocaine is here to stay. My advice to policy-makers is not to concentrate on eradication. They should focus on the impact and harm the drugs have on our communities. That means responding to concerns about antisocial behaviour and offering accessible and effective treatment to those who become addicted.' Maureen Lynch Mothers Against Guns 'There's a strong connection between the increase in crack cocaine and the increased use of guns. Many of the killings are all about protecting turf and territory. No one group can solve this problem on their own. The police, the parents, the population and the politicians have to work together. We have to protect the vulnerable ones who get hooked and then find themselves being controlled by the drugs barons. The big guns rarely touch the drugs; they just take the money.' Megan Jones Head of community safety and drugs at Camden council 'In Camden we have a team who go out on to the streets to work with addicts. However, people with addictive drug problems and compulsive behaviour are generally unwilling to take up treatment so enforcement measures such as the anti-social behaviour order can help. In the long term, an important solution must be to reduce the social exclusion.' Danny Kushlick Director, Transform Drug Policy Foundation 'Crack is a product of prohibition. In the illegal market place, concentrated high-potency versions of drugs are easier to traffic and provide dealers with the highest levels of profit. Paradoxically, policing can make things worse - creating instability among drug gangs, leading to turf wars and raising the price so users commit more acquisitive crime. The long-term solution is to legalise coca-based products and make them available through regulated outlets.' Ian Blair Deputy Metropolitan Police commissioner 'Disrupting the supply of class A drugs such as crack is a priority. Partnership is the key to success and a London-wide strategy will be an effective tool in the fight to end the misery caused by class A drug supply and addiction.' Peter Stoker Director, National Drug Prevention Alliance 'Social factors may have kick-started crack but it is now spreading. The increase is almost entirely due to the lack of a proper preventive approach. We seem to be content to pick someone up when they have fallen over but less keen to prevent them falling over in the first place.' - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake