Pubdate: Sat, 23 Sep 2006 Source: Washington Post (DC) Page: B04 Copyright: 2006 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Henri E. Cauvin, Washington Post Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) RESIDENTS SAY DRUG ROUNDUP GAVE SOME RELIEF Standing in the middle of a courtyard yesterday in the Woodland Terrace public housing complex, a 24-year-old mother said life in the Southeast neighborhood was a little better these days -- ever since police started taking down the drug dealers who have long operated openly in the complex. "Before, this whole place would be crowded with people, with boys that don't even live around here," the mother said late yesterday afternoon, her son and daughter at her leg clamoring to go home. Gone, she said, are the buzzing motorbikes that would crisscross the courtyards and alleys of Woodland Terrace, often driven by drug dealers and their accomplices around what has been a busy market for PCP, cocaine and marijuana. Yesterday, authorities explained how the change happened, announcing that a five-month-long undercover investigation by D.C. police, D.C. housing police and the U.S. attorney's office had led to charges against 24 people. Taken into custody over 12 days this month, the suspects have been charged primarily with drug distribution offenses, most of them felonies, and the effect at Woodland is evident, people who live there say. "It's good," said the young mother who grew up in Woodland Terrace. "We can rest. Our kids can rest. You don't have to worry about your kids." But the sense of liberation only goes so far. Like other people interviewed yesterday at the complex, the mother was too fearful of drug dealers to give her name. Things are better, she said, but not that much better. The investigation is part of a federally sponsored push to target drug trafficking and violent crime in public housing. The District is one of 20 jurisdictions nationwide selected for the Public Housing Safety Initiative. News of the arrests in Woodland Terrace came a day after the D.C. Housing Authority, aided by D.C. police, staged a crackdown of their own at the Park Morton public housing complex in Northwest -- another hot spot for drug dealing. Responding to complaints from Park Morton residents, the Housing Authority went door-to-door looking for people not listed on leases and told them they have to leave. In dozens of cases, authorities changed locks on apartment doors in an effort to keep out unauthorized tenants. Resident leaders say such tenants are a big part of the crime that has made Park Morton notorious. Over the years, some of the city's public housing complexes have been razed and replaced with mixed-income development. But as the city struggles to preserve affordable housing for the poor and for working-class people, improving the public housing that is left has taken on greater importance. Woodland Terrace is one of those places. Spread over a maze of two- and three-story buildings, the 234 garden apartments sit in an area bordered by Ainger Place, Bruce Place, Reynolds Place and Langston Place. The buildings are faded, and the gardens are bare. "Adrian Fenty for Mayor" signs pop up here and there. It was at Woodland Terrace that Fenty, who won the Democratic primary, and opponent Marie Johns staged their one-on-one debate a few weeks ago. As nearby schools let out yesterday, children made their way home through the alleys and courtyards that perhaps were envisioned as welcome open space but that ultimately became accomplices in the drug trade. The courtyards are hard to see from the street, making it harder for police to observe illegal activity, and the warren of alleyways makes it easy for people to make quick getaways. "It was something like a fortress," said Cmdr. Joel Maupin, whose 7th District station sits barely a block away from Woodland Terrace. And that is why it took a lot of stealth work, he said. "You have to infiltrate the interior and make your buys in the interior of the complex," Maupin said. Undercover officers from the 7th District made 63 drug buys in designated "drug free" zones from April to August, many of them in open areas where children were playing. Using video surveillance equipment provided by the U.S. attorney's office, investigators were able to record drug buys to use as evidence in the cases. Another woman, who is 44 and has lived half her life in Woodland Terrace, said the difference is unmistakable. Sitting in front of her Langston Place home, the woman said the blocks around her home are much quieter these days, with less traffic, less fighting, less gunfire. "It's changed a lot," she said. "It's quiet." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake