Pubdate: Tue, 19 Sep 2006 Source: Journal-Inquirer (CT) Copyright: 2006 Journal-Inquirer Contact: http://www.journalinquirer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/220 Author: Jason Rowe, Journal Inquirer VERNON PULLS OUT OF REGIONAL DRUG TASK FORCE VERNON - The Vernon Police Department has pulled out of a regional drug enforcement task force, citing a philosophical difference between the local state's attorney's office and task force officials. The Vernon department formally pulled out of the East Central Narcotics Task Force last week after nearly 20 years of working with nearby departments on drug investigations, seizures, and enforcement actions. Instead, police will pool their resources with a statewide narcotics task force administered by the state police. The narcotics task force was made up of Vernon, Manchester, South Windsor, East Hartford, and Glastonbury and was designed to allow those departments to combine resources to track illegal drug use in the area. But in recent months, local law enforcement officials began considering a change and Vernon police Chief Rudolf Rossmy, Capt. James Kenny, and Matthew Gedansky, state's attorney for the Judicial District of Tolland, began having conversations about the possibility of Vernon leaving the local task force. Eventually, all three came to the consensus that it might be better for Vernon to make the switch. Kenny said Monday that the driving force behind the decision was a difference in prosecutorial philosophy between Gedansky and the overall task force. The remaining four departments fall within the Judicial District of Manchester, meaning whenever an arrest was made in Vernon, task force officials would have to work with a different set of prosecutors with different ways of doing business. "He is much more exacting in what he is requiring," Kenny said of Gedansky. "He has certain requirements we must meet. There is no animosity. We wish the other members of the East Central Narcotics Task Force well." While he praised the work of the local task force, Gedansky said a lack of resources often meant investigations were not as thorough as he would have liked. Gedansky said the East Central task force has a strong history of successful investigations and has been staffed by many fine investigators. "We prefer as full as an investigation as possible, so we can learn as much about a case as possible," Gedansky said. "ECN just hasn't been able to provide the resources for those investigations as of late. It's not really a reflection of them." Sgt. Sandy Ficara of the Manchester Police Department, where the East Central Narcotics Task Force is based, said that he respected Vernon's decision and wished them well. But Ficara also said that he believes the narcotics task force is conducting thorough investigations and said the unit continues to be successful in making arrests in drug cases, both large and small. "Our cases our very, very solid," Ficara said today. "They just felt they wanted to try something different. We'll miss them." With Vernon now formally out of the local narcotics task force, police are in the process of joining the state police drug task force. Kenny said that process should be complete within a couple days. One advantage of joining the state police task force is an increase in the number of officers and investigators available to work drug investigations, Kenny said. Before, when task force officers made a drug arrest, the identity of the department's undercover officers was often revealed, meaning a new officer would have be brought on board. But Kenny said the state police have many more undercover officers, meaning officers working in local undercover investigations might be able stay on the beat longer. "The state police tend to work more long-term investigations, which is what Matt is looking for," Kenny said. When Vernon, Manchester, and South Windsor teamed up to investigate regional drug crimes in 1986, the resulting Tri-Town Narcotics Task Force was the first multi-jurisdictional task force in the state, according to the Manchester Police Department's Web site. Officers from Glastonbury and East Hartford joined later and the task force's name was changed to the East Central Narcotics Task Force. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath