Pubdate: Thu, 23 Dec 2004 Source: Post and Courier, The (Charleston, SC) Copyright: 2004 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 Author: Schuyler Kropf, Of The Post and Courier Staff City police's I-95 patrols questioned Charleston's controversial police patrols on Interstate 95 in Santee, some 70 miles away, may soon be debated in City Council. Some council members question Mayor Joe Riley's power to approve a police operation so far outside the city borders, contending such decisions should be made by the council, not the mayor. "My position is that he's delegated a power he doesn't have," said Councilman Bob George, who along with Councilman Henry Fishburne want the issue included in an upcoming council meeting. On Sunday, The Post and Courier reported a little-known contractual agreement Police Chief Reuben Greenberg signed with Santee's police chief to patrol a stretch of the I-95 corridor for drug traffickers. In exchange, Greenberg's department gets one-half the proceeds from drug seizures. The agreement has been in place for more than 2-1/2 years, but members of City Council said they knew nothing about it until contacted by the newspaper. The issue of the patrols flared briefly at the end of Tuesday's City Council meeting. On Wednesday, George said he wasn't ready to condemn the patrols outright, but said the mayor was wrong in acting alone. "I think council has a right to discuss it and then decide whether they want to do it or not," George said. Riley said he supports Greenberg's prerogative to station police officers as he sees fit, including in drug interdiction on a distant interstate favored by drug-runners. "He's my chief of police," Riley said at Tuesday's council meeting. "I have great confidence in him, and this council is not going to get in the business of deciding how police resources are allocated." Riley repeated his stance Wednesday, adding that he supported creative and aggressive ways of hunting drugs potentially bound for Charleston. The car patrols have netted city police about $85,500 in cash, led to seizures of a quantity of narcotics and the arrest of several fugitives. However, the salaries to send two officers to Santee several times a week during the past 30 months have run in the area of $100,000. George and Fishburne seek a debate on the issue after the holidays. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek