Pubdate: Wed, 14 Sep 2005 Source: Boston Herald (MA) Copyright: 2005 The Boston Herald, Inc Contact: http://news.bostonherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/53 Author: O'ryan Johnson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) COPS CLEAN UP THE YARD: CRITICS HIT CITY EFFORT A drug treatment advocate and several vagrants who live in and around Boston Common and the Public Garden say a police crackdown on druggies that got under way in earnest yesterday is not solving the problem, instead simply pushing it to other neighborhoods. "Moving people around does not solve their addiction," said Gail Enman, executive director of the Cambridge and Somerville Program for Alcohol and Drug Abuse Rehabilitation. "They carry their addiction around with them." Police were out in force in the Common and Garden, largely in response to Monday's Herald expose of open-air drug activity in the premier Hub greenspaces. Undercover officers strolled in pairs, police radios and handcuffs tucked under T-shirts; mounted police staged horse trailers in one of the Common's worst locales for drug use, where last week brazen crack fiends smoked in broad daylight. "Once you squeeze the tube of toothpaste, it really is a dilemma," said Enman, who estimates 90 percent of the homeless her program treats have substance abuse problems. "If you move the problem, it just sprouts out someplace else." Even as the police push was on, junkies still congregated at St. Paul's Church across from Park Street T station on Tremont Street. Asked where addicts are headed now, a man said, "Who knows." Police on horseback questioned anyone who seemed to be camped out in the park. But none of the addicts or dealers photographed by the Herald over the past two weeks was spotted yesterday on the Common. One woman stood by a tree while two mounted officers and three cops arriving in cruisers donned gloves to search her bags for signs of drugs. Police put the woman in a cruiser and shuttled her to the Pine Street Inn. "Some people are just so messed up there's nothing you can do," said one mounted officer who helped in the search. Moments later, a few yards up the path, the two mounted police stopped to question another homeless man partially hidden behind trees. Meanwhile in the Public Garden, in nearly the identical spot where John P. Gagliardi Jr. was photographed taking a fatal hit of heroin on Aug. 25, a photographer caught two liberal arts students sharing marijuana while listening to music on an Apple laptop computer. When told about the overdose death, the Herald's follow-up reports and the subsequent crackdown, the inhalers were unphased. "Yeah, but this is a joint," said one, a literature and English major, who copped to toking up in the Garden with his pal once a week. "It's very refreshing. We do it to like take in nature," he said. Neither saw anything wrong with smoking marijuana in an area replete with families and children. "We're not out here to bother anybody," one student said. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman