Pubdate: Sat, 12 Nov 2005 Source: Indianapolis Star (IN) Copyright: 2005 Indianapolis Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.indystar.com/help/contact/letters.html Website: http://www.starnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/210 Author: Paul Bird POLICE SEIZE HEROIN, SALES RECORDS DURING RAID Johnson County Police believe dealers are selling costly drug to youths in White River Township, Greenwood. Police believe some teenagers from affluent White River Township and Greenwood families are using heroin from Indianapolis drug dealers. The highly addictive and expensive opiate has been readily available, police said. Three teenagers in Johnson County have overdosed. One teenager admitted having a $200-a-day heroin addiction, said Johnson County Sheriff Terry McLaughlin. A $50 dose would be about the size of an aspirin and can be injected or smoked. Thursday night, police raided a Capital Place townhouse apartment in the 4300 block of Declaration Drive, west of Southern Plaza Shopping Center, Indianapolis. Officers found Mexican brown heroin bundled in small multicolored balloons, and $13,520. The seized drugs were valued at about $50,000, said Greenwood police narcotic investigator Sgt. Jeff McCorkle. No one was home when police arrived at 7:30 p.m. No arrests had been made by Friday afternoon. Three men lived in the apartment, neighbors said. Greenwood Police Chief Joe Pitcher and the sheriff accompanied armed officers on the raid. On Oct. 15, a 15-year-old boy overdosed on heroin was dumped out of a car on the parking lot of SS. Francis & Clare Catholic Church, 5901 Olive Branch Road. Another 17-year-old boy in a car was stopped a short time later by Greenwood police at Fairview Road near Ind. 135. Pitcher said the 17-year-old was an accomplice to the heroin overdose. Both boys blamed the other for providing the drug, according to a Johnson County sheriff's report. The older boy said he picked up his friend in the Eagle Trace subdivision and noticed a needle sticking out of his arm. He said he drove into the church parking lot and attempted to help his friend, who was passing out and vomiting. "He just left him there and called 911," Pitcher said. Thursday's raid was directly tied to the overdoses, McLaughlin said. "We think the drug was being used by kids from affluent families," McLaughlin said. "It's very expensive." A federal Drug Enforcement Administration news release placed a $200,000 per pound value on Mexican brown heroin. "That's what a DEA agent told me when I talked to them about us finding heroin down here," Pitcher said. "He immediately said that we must have some families with money, and that agent was from another part of the country and didn't know anything about White River Township." According to Indianapolis police, Hispanic drug trafficking usually is a daylight operation. "They rent an apartment or house and only deal with other dealers," Pitcher said. Thursday's raid also uncovered meticulous records of drug sales. "From these, we know they have been operating for about a year," Pitcher said. "We're pretty sure this will end the heroin pipeline from Indianapolis to White River Township -- at least for now." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman