Pubdate: Wed, 26 Jan 2005 Source: Times Union (Albany, NY) Copyright: 2005 Capital Newspapers Division of The Hearst Corporation Contact: http://www.timesunion.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/452 Author: Michele Morgan Bolton, Staff writer SOARES' REMARK FUELS CONTROVERSY DA Says He Was Suggesting Way To Channel Youths' Skills, Not Legitimize Drug Trade ALBANY -- Albany County District Attorney David Soares is under fire for public comments he made about a plan to deter young people from the drug trade by setting them up in legitimate businesses. Soares, 35, was leaving an event to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Jan. 17 when he made some remarks to a WGY radio reporter. Since then, his words have been aired as many as five times a day amid declarations he wants to set up drug dealers in vacant storefronts along Clinton Avenue. As he exited the stage at the event sponsored by labor organizations at the Thomas O'Brien Academy of Science and Technology, Soares stopped briefly to discuss his ideas. "If you're a drug dealer, no matter what level you are, you do have an economic sense of how much to charge, delivering services," he said. "It's a shame that we're not using that same skill set and transferring it into something that's positive." "It doesn't require a tremendous amount of investment," Soares went on. "It requires certain people with certain resources to say, 'Here, we'll give you the storefront, now what are you going to sell?' Why not let these young people do their art work and sell it out of these storefronts, for example, as a way of building hope." Soares admits he can't recall exactly what was said. "I have to accept responsibility for what I say, but I don't have to perpetuate something that's false. If I misspoke, I acknowledge that. But it's preposterous to think a prosecutor would advocate to move an illegal operation indoors." "I was saying let's look at the opportunity we have here right now to turn people around," he said. "A lot of young men and women have entrepreneurial skills. If we were to open up these storefronts and allow them to have an opportunity, the business is in the stores, and not out on the corner." "I'm not looking to put together a program for drug dealers to legitimize their business," Soares said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth