Pubdate: Mon, 30 Aug 2004 Source: Leicester Mercury (UK) Copyright: 2004 Northcliffe Electronic Publishing Ltd Contact: http://www.leicestermercury.co.uk Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2251 Author: Ciaran Fagan 500 DRUG DEALERS ARRESTED IN A YEAR Police have dealt a major blow to crime in Leicestershire by arresting nearly 500 suspected drug dealers in the past 12 months. Officers say the streets are safer after a record-breaking year in the war on the heroin and crack cocaine trades. The force has arrested 475 Class A drug dealers in the past year - more than six times the number arrested in the previous year, when 74 dealers were caught. The latest Home Office figures obtained by the Leicester Mercury show officers arrested 244 heroin dealers last year - compared to 35 in the previous 12 months, while there is similar news on the assault on the crack cocaine market - with arrests rising from nine in 2002/03 to 135 last year. The remaining Class A drug arrests were for people dealing cocaine, ecstasy and amphetamines. Leicestershire's chief constable, Matt Baggott, pledged to target the hard drugs trade when he took up his post more than two years ago. He told the Leicester Mercury: "The more drug dealers we lock up, the safer our streets and young people will be. "We're saying 'give us the information and we will do the rest'." The force's money laundering experts are also stepping up their efforts to seize the trappings of some of the biggest dealers' luxury lifestyles. Senior officers believe dealers are now ditching the trappings of their wealth - the flash cars, luxury homes, designer suits, jewellery and private school places for their children - in an effort to throw officers off their trail. These officers seized luxury goods worth around UKP1 million last year under the Proceeds of Crime Act - legislation introduced by the Government in 2002 to take back anything bought with illegally obtained cash. Detective Inspector Jim Riley, of the economic crime unit, said: "They know they are putting themselves on the coconut shy for us to knock them down. They can't be flash with their wealth, their lifestyles must change." The Highfields, Beaumont Leys, Mowmacre and Stocking Farm areas were among those targeted in police operations in the past year. Shaukut Seedat, a former chairman of the St Peter's Tenants' Association in Highfields, said: "There has been a concentration on drug dealing. People have noticed what the police are doing. "Hopefully, that will send a strong message but the police have to continue and go after the big people. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek