Pubdate: Sun, 03 Sep 2006 Source: Herald-Dispatch, The (Huntington, WV) Copyright: 2006 The Herald-Dispatch Contact: http://www.hdonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1454 CITY'S DRUG FIGHT MUST GO BEYOND ONE-DAY SWEEPS Huntington's drug-dealing community got a dose of shock and awe on Tuesday when the Huntington Police Department, the West Virginia State Police, the FBI, the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, the Marshall University Police Department and the Cabell County Prosecutor's Office cooperated on a sweep that saw 80 people arrested in the largest one-day sweep in the city this year. About 110 law enforcement officers, troopers and agents participated. The daylong series of raids focused on residences throughout Huntington, where police say they confiscated large amounts of crack cocaine, guns and other items. Tuesday's crackdown brought Gov. Joe Manchin to town. In a news conference at the Huntington Police Department, Manchin said Tuesday's raid was part of a statewide crackdown already credited with seizing more than $53 million in illegal drugs. "We must win it," he said of the state's war on drugs. "I want to send a strong message that West Virginia is a state where we will not tolerate drug activity, and where strong, swift justice will be delivered to those individuals who try to distribute illegal drugs." Manchin said the West Virginia State Police also were looking for drug suspects in Kanawha, Jackson and Calhoun counties on Tuesday. It was good to see the various agencies make a one-day sweep through the city to show that law enforcement at all levels knows what's going on here. And it was good to see Mayor David Felinton and police Chief Gene Bumgardner taking visible roles in the effort. The sweep was not as big as the early accounts indicated, however. Public documents indicate only 30 of the 80 arrests were directly related to drug crimes. Records show 35 of the arrests were for other charges such as worthless checks and attempted murder. Information was not available on the other warrants. And at least 29 of the 80 people were already in jail or prison on other charges when they were served with warrants. In any event, Tuesday's efforts were good for showing the public that law enforcement agencies are cracking down on the local drug trade. But the results of "Operation Moneyton" are yet to be seen. The 80 people who were arrested now must have their cases prosecuted in the court system. The question is how those cases will be handled and how many of those 80 people will spend any time in jail. Unless, of course, something has changed in the court system since the last time The Herald-Dispatch tracked what happens to people arrested on felony drug charges. In many cases, charges are reduced and the suspected drug dealers spend no time in jail. If law enforcement officials want to show their occasional sweeps through town are truly effective, they would do well to issue annual reports of drug arrests. The public needs to know how many people arrested for drug crimes, whether the charges are reduced and how much time drug dealers spend in jail. The public needs to see the names of people and how their cases are handled in the court system. Numbers alone won't do, as cases can drag out for months, and sometimes more than a year. The real breakthrough in the drug fight will come when the demand drops so much that Detroit crack dealers will find Huntington not worth their time. This is the only real long-term solution to the problem, and it's the hardest one to solve. Until then, law enforcement and the courts will have to do their parts to make this area unsafe for drug dealers, and they will have to provide more than one-day sweeps to show that their efforts are effective. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman