Pubdate: Sat, 03 Dec 2005 Source: Asheville Citizen-Times (NC) Copyright: 2005 Asheville Citizen-Times Contact: http://www.citizen-times.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/863 Author: Adam Behsudi PLAN AIMS TO TAKE DEALERS DOWN Drug Commission Offers $1,000 Reward For Sellers' Arrests, Convictions ASHEVILLE - Catching a big fish in a little pond might sound like an easy thing to do. But when the big fish are big-time drug dealers and the pond is Asheville, it's not that easy of a task for communities and police. The Asheville-Buncombe Drug Commission wants to give people an incentive for helping police arrest dealers who are selling large quantities of drugs, either directly to the public or to smaller, street-level dealers. The "Dealer Down" program was named to counter the phrase "man down" that dealers use when police are sighted near an area where drugs are being sold. The program will reward whistleblowers in the community $1,000 if a dealer possessing a half a kilogram, or 1.1 pounds, of hard drugs like cocaine, crack or methamphetamines is arrested. Another $1,000 will be rewarded if the same person is convicted. "We're trying to bring down these bigger people who do so much harm," said Vice Mayor Carl Mumpower, the chair of the drug commission, at a Friday morning press conference. He said the reward money is being raised privately and does not involve any funding from the city. Drug arrests in Asheville have increased 33 percent over four years, with 1,212 arrests in the 2004-05 fiscal year, according to city staff. Trina Boyd, a resident of the Livingston Heights housing development, said the program could potentially slow down the drug trade in some Asheville communities. She said the issue is a complex one, and neighbors need to be on the lookout for drug users as well. "We're targeting the drug dealers, but what about the number of people that are coming in to buy the drugs?" she said. Boyd said a cash reward might compel some residents to be more vigilant, but if someone is already being supported by drug money, as many are, the chances they will report a dealer or supplier are slim. With the program targeting larger volume dealers, the commission hopes to minimize the supply to street-level dealers. "We're talking about going after the bigger distributors," said Asheville Police Chief Bill Hogan. "These are the quantities we can prosecute at a federal level." Gene Bell, a drug commission member and interim executive director of the Asheville Housing Authority, said it's hard to determine how effective the program will be but said it is a way to deter crime in some Asheville communities. James Thompson, a resident of the Aston Park Towers, said he is willing to try anything that could limit the drug trade in his community, where many elderly and disabled people live. "We know there's a lot of selling going on," he said. As the resident caretaker of the neighborhood association for the Aston Park Towers and the Garden Apartments, Thompson said he sometimes knows very specifically where drugs are being sold at certain times and would not be afraid to report it to a tip line. Thompson, an organizer of the hall monitor program for his building, said there are some monitors who would readily report activity to the police drug suppression unit and one hall monitor who already "wears the tip line out" with calls. A generous reward, he said, might compel more to call in to report drug dealing. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin