Pubdate: Thu, 05 Feb 2004 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2004 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 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/undercover+police TWELVE CHARGED IN DRUG SWEEP Twelve people are charged with drug-related offences after London police and RCMP officers swooped down on Dundas and Richmond streets in an operation targeting street-level drug dealers. The four-month undercover operation, named Project Clark, began last fall after several complaints from downtown businesses and citizens about chronic drug dealing, Const. Paul Martin, a London police spokesperson, said yesterday. Undercover police officers focused their efforts near the intersection of Dundas and Richmond streets, buying small amounts of crack cocaine, ecstasy, marijuana and magic mushrooms 36 times. Each time an undercover officer bought drugs, police identified the dealer. Arrest warrants were later issued and carried out Tuesday. Police began scooping up the wanted people around lunch hour and made their last arrest at 9 p.m. Eight people are still wanted for drug-related offences, including trafficking, Martin said. The sweep was welcome news for downtown businesses in an area that has long fought a poor public perception. "We're trying to clean up the downtown and to make it a safe, clean place for people to shop and to live . . . the drug trafficking and the loitering, it's not conducive for that sort of thing," said Lindsey Elwood, chairperson of the Downtown London Business Association. The sweep sends a message to drug dealers, said Janette MacDonald, manager of MainStreet London, which provides grants and professional design advice to downtown businesses for facade improvement and renovations. "It's certainly a step in the right direction, cleaning up the streets downtown." Businesses and downtown residents were disturbed as they watched drug deals go down, she said. "We're very happy that they (police) did this. Hopefully they'll (drug dealers) stay away. It just raises the awareness the police are not just going to walk by and not do anything about it," MacDonald said. "Hopefully this will encourage people to come back downtown." Police didn't know the total value of the drugs seized yesterday, but said each piece of crack cocaine bought was worth about $50, the ecstasy worth $40 and marijuana and magic mushrooms worth about $20 each, Martin said. The greater impact, he said, came in the number of drug dealers taken off the street. "The value of the drugs that were seized or purchased was not the focal point of this investigation. It was the activities of the individuals that were taking place on the streets in public during daylight hours," he said, adding dealers were approaching and bothering citizens and disrupting business. "These are the dealers that are harassing and trying to influence other kids . . . These kids don't have to worry about this anymore. They don't have to deal with the pressure of buying a gram of pot when they walk downtown," Martin said. Had undercover officers asked to buy large amounts of drugs, "bells and whistles" would have gone off for the drug dealers, alerting them the buyer was possibly a police officer, he said. Project Clark was similar to Project Impact, a five-month undercover investigation targeting street level crack cocaine dealers in east London last June. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin