Pubdate: Sun, 16 Oct 2005 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: 2005 The Observer Contact: http://www.observer.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/315 Author: Denis Campbell REVEALED: BRITAIN'S NETWORK OF CHILD DRUG RUNNERS The fullest survey yet into the UK's crack and heroin trade shows it is fuelled by children and teenagers in search of a quick fortune. Joe had just celebrated his 15th birthday when his father asked him to join the family business: selling heroin and crack cocaine. With time on his hands after being excluded from school, and keen to please his dad - a veteran drug dealer - Joe agreed. 'I was bored and thought it was cool to help my dad out [selling drugs]. He's always bought us quite a lot, so I wanted to help,' says Joe, now aged 17. He has been acting as a 'runner' for two years, carrying small bags of heroin or rocks of crack from his father to 30-40 buyers every day and returning with pocketfuls of ?10 and ?20 notes. With a grim inevitability his father also recruited Joe's younger brother Daniel once he turned 15. Daniel said: 'I had nothing to do. My dad asked me. It's easy money. I like it. I can buy things now and I get girls.' The brothers are now entrenched in the ?6.5 billion-a-year UK illicit drugs trade, carrying out dozens of daily drop-offs to addicts. It has been a lucrative decision for both boys: they are each paid ?150 a week for selling and distributing 200 bags of heroin and 200 rocks of crack between them. Their father pays them from his ?3,000-?4,000 weekly proceeds. For Joe and Daniel, brought up in a bleak, deprived part of a major British city, with little formal education and few career prospects, running drugs is now their life. 'It's people like me and my brother. We've got nothing else, so why not?' says Joe. 'I know it's wrong, but what else is there for me?' But they are not the only child foot-soldiers in Britain's flourishing black market in illegal substances - and they are not the youngest. The number of children and teenagers working in Britain's drugs industry is growing, according to a shocking new study of drug dealing. An in-depth, 20-month investigation by a team of criminologists and drugs experts from King's College London - including, for the first time, testimony from scores of dealers themselves - has found that: . Children aged 12 are selling drugs. . More young people are becoming runners or spotters for dealers. . Many truant from school in order to keep their clients supplied. . Many are drawn into the trade by a close relative. . Teenagers in areas rife with drugs often admire dealers, envy their income and aspire to emulate them. . Adult dealers increasingly enlist them as runners and lookouts because they believe their age makes them less likely to be caught. Indeed, teenagers in some rundown parts of British cities are so desperate to get into the drugs trade that they offer to work for free in order to gain a foothold, according to research by the four academics led by Professor Mike Hough, director of the Institute for Criminal Policy Research at King's College. Their forthcoming report, commissioned by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, carries extra weight because, uniquely, drug dealers themselves - 68 in total - have revealed who gets involved, why they do it, how they spend their proceeds and how they avoid getting arrested. The report concludes that: 'From our interviews we found that young people's involvement in all our drug markets was on the increase.' Initiatives to keep teenagers from becoming sellers were not working, they found. Evidence from more than 100 police officers, probation officers, drug treatment specialists and community workers in the four urban areas of England studied, as well as 200 local residents in each place, bore out the dealers' testimony - including the shocking revelation that 12-year-olds were involved. In each place, heroin and crack cocaine were the most commonly consumed drugs. The authors agreed to keep the exact locations secret and persuade the dealers to talk in detail about the realities, rather than mythologies, of their trade. But they say that most cities in Britain contain areas very similar to the four they examined. 'They are as young as 12. The early to mid-teens are involved as runners. There's a quick turnaround of runners if some are arrested,' one police officer told the researchers. Explaining their motivation, a community group worker said: 'A lot of them see the money. If you come from a single-parent background and can't afford very much because you have six brothers and sisters, and you can get an extra ?150 a week, you wouldn't say no. They are the runners.' Or, as one dealer put it: 'Dealers ask them to run, young people want to run, and they get money - everyone's happy.' The researchers were repeatedly told that teenagers craved the fast cars and designer clothes lifestyle associated with drug dealers. 'The young men we spoke to wanted to be successful and free from money worries, but they also thought that the chances of success in the legitimate economy were non-existent, but that in the illegitimate economy they had everything to play for,' they concluded. Of the 68 drug sellers, 52 were male and 16 female; the youngest was a boy aged 12, the oldest a 53-year-old man. Twenty had begun selling drugs before turning 18. Thirty-six had left school before the official age of 16; 28 had spent time in a young offenders' institution for 15 to 21-year-olds; and over half had spent part of their childhood at a children's home, with a foster family or in secure accommodation. 'Given such troubled backgrounds, it is easy to see why some teenagers start selling drugs - as a more exciting and rewarding alternative to slogging away for hours in a fastfood restaurant or supermarket, and a way of earning two or three times more money,' the report reveals. Some are young men aged 17 or 18 who have at least one child. As one 17-year-old said: 'I can't sign on, can't get a job and I need to raise money. I asked a dealer if I could do it and he said yes, so I just started doing it. I have a daughter.' Drug experts said that the report's findings were stark. 'These findings about young people's growing role in the drugs trade reminds me of when crack hit New York in the Eighties. It was estimated that it created jobs for 100,000-150,000 young people, working as runners, lookouts and gofers,' said Harry Shapiro of Drugscope, the UK's leading drug information charity. 'The stark economics of life in the sort of deprived urban areas where drug dealing is endemic, that are found in most of the UK's larger conurbations, is that 12 to 15-year-olds with limited employment opportunities, apart from perhaps a paper round, have the opportunity to earn sums which would be impossible for them in other circumstances.' The 60-page report is grim reading. It reveals how council flats are taken over and turned into dealing dens; tenants are bullied and bribed into allowing drugs to be sold from their homes; up to 200 addicts a day visit these places, and spend up to ?1,000 a week on their habit; and how the price of crack and heroin has fallen. Dealers also feel they have little to fear from the police. Its findings raise a whole series of difficult questions about the effectiveness of current anti-drugs strategies, especially police efforts to stem the apparently free flow of Class A drugs. Revealingly, many of the 68 drug sellers said they viewed dealing as less risky than other crimes. 'The sellers in our study were largely unaffected by the police,' the authors note. While dealers 'took measures to avoid being arrested, the threat of imprisonment was not real enough for them to desist from selling'. The police's job in catching dealers has become even harder because mobile phones mean most sellers now operate from flats and send runners to deliver the gear and collect payment, rather than on the street, they note. Crackdowns only displace, not remove, the problem. Supply lines are only briefly interrupted. Given that a Cabinet Office strategy unit report on crack, heroin and cocaine this summer estimated that users spend about ?4 billion on them, it is easy to see why some of the dealers in this new study were earning as much as ?20,000 a week, though the average was a more modest ?7,500. Runners are making an average of ?450 weekly, though some rake in as much as ?4,000. This study also challenges many of the popular notions about drug dealing. For example, rather than being loathed as parasites the researchers found that drug dealers sometimes 'command at least tacit support' from local residents and are 'tolerated to some degree'. The authors conclude that this is partly because these communities have an 'ambiguous relationship' with the local police and, controversially, partly because some people in areas where dealers come from and operate themselves 'benefit' directly or indirectly from their activities. Hough and his colleagues identify several such advantages. First, drug dealing gives local people opportunities to earn money working as runners, drivers, lookouts, door watchers at dealing houses and guards looking after dealers' drug supplies. Second, the easy availability of stolen goods, which around half the dealers interviewed accepted in lieu of cash, lets people in poverty buy items cheaply that they could otherwise not afford. Third, some residents receive cash handouts from relatives involved in drugs, enabling them to pay for their rent, weekly shopping, buy Christmas presents or pay for car repairs. Lastly, the authors also found that an area with high levels of drug dealing may well also have less 'ordinary' crime - car theft and burglary especially - - because dealers use their influence to ensure they don't happen, so the police have less reason to visit the estate. Shapiro confirms: 'Drug dealers want to protect their own turf and wish as far as possible not to attract the police's attention, so they may have their own enforcement procedures to keep other sorts of crime down.' The King's College team believe the authorities need to accept that enforcement tactics alone will never halt the drugs trade. Instead they should hire ex-dealers to educate young people about the less glamorous realities of their former trade and run a drug-specific equivalent of the prison 'buddy' scheme for dealers returning to the outside world, to help them avoid returning to the drug trade. Best of all, they say, would be preventing teenagers from getting involved in the first place by investing in youth outreach workers to identify and help the sort of vulnerable young people who do start selling drugs, stop relying on shock tactics to deter youngsters, and give them an alternative to the dead-end existences that let them see drug dealing as more rewarding. As the report reveals, it is not an easy task. 'I spend my money on everything: clothes, cars and women. I swear to God, I try to live like [rap star] Diddy,' explains one young dealer. 'I just love it, I just love it. I'm still young. My cousins are all settled down, but I go out from the Wednesday night to the Saturday and just kill it with eveything, drink, the lot.' Until the alternatives to drug selling are more appealing than ?200-a-week menial jobs in Tesco, McDonald's and the like, the number of teenagers ready and eager to play their part in Britain's biggest, murkiest and most damaging underground trade is unlikely to fall. *The names of some dealers have been changed Drugs in Britain: The facts 11m people in England and Wales have used illegal drugs. 4m people a year take a banned substance. 500,000 use Class A substances such as cocaine and heroin. 35.6 per cent of 16 to 59-year-olds have taken illicit drugs. ?10 bn is the annual economic cost of drug misuse, including treatment and drug-related crime 500,000 Britons are thought to be drug addicts. 141,000 people receive treatment from drug misuse agencies and GPs. 18 is the average age at which people start using drugs. 6,406 drug-related deaths were recorded between 1997 and 2001 in England and Wales: 369 from cocaine, 145 from ecstasy and 5,188 from opiates. In the same period alcohol killed 25,000 to 200,000 and tobacco was involved in about 500,000 fatalities. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh