Pubdate: Sat, 21 Oct 2006 Source: Times Union (Albany, NY) Copyright: 2006 Capital Newspapers Division of The Hearst Corporation Contact: http://www.timesunion.com/forms/emaileditor.asp Website: http://www.timesunion.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/452 HOMES NO SAFE HAVEN FOR DEALS ALBANY -- Albany County prosecutors are broadcasting a new message to drug dealers they hope will resonate with even hardened criminals: Sling drugs from home, and we'll even evict your mom. When police swoop in to raid suspected drug dens, family members can and will be thrown out if they knew what was happening and did nothing about it, authorities said. "We demand that everybody be evicted," Assistant District Attorney Jessica Blain-Lewis, who has been bringing the cases since November, said flatly. "It's going to be up to the judge to decide who knew or should have known." The program, which has parallels in Troy and Schenectady, is based on so-called "bawdy house" anti-vice laws that have been on the books in some form since the early 1900s. Authorities say it gives them the power to disrupt drug markets and punish those who give haven to dealers and the landlords who knowingly and repeatedly rent to them. In law enforcement circles they are known as narcotics evictions, and the premise is simple: If you let people sell drugs out of your apartment, if you know about or should have known about it, you will be tossed out on the street. And for the first time since the program started in Albany, it survived a legal test this week when a judge ordered an Ontario Street landlord to heed the prosecutors' eviction order and fined him for not complying sooner. New York City authorities have been doing the evictions for years to near-universal praise. They bill them as a way to counter a closed-door drug market less visible and sometimes harder to reach than the street-corner sales that have come to symbolize the trade. "There may be a limitless supply of drug dealers from downstate," and drug users may continue to fuel the marketplace, said Schenectady County District Attorney Robert Carney, "but the thinking is that you ultimately have a finite number of locations. And it's not going to happen where people live in their own homes and care about them." In Albany and elsewhere, the programs are part of larger efforts to get landlords and tenants working with police and prosecutors to protect them from the lawbreakers around them. Albany's initiative is known as "Safe Homes-Safe Streets" and includes another program where landlords give police a list of their tenants and permission to roust and arrest trespassers who should not be on the property. The buildings are marked with white signs stamped with the police and district attorney's seal -- about 252 so far, and growing. The DeWitt Clinton Apartments, where a 69-year-old man was found stabbed to death earlier this month, is one of the program's newest participants, authorities said. A similar program in Troy has helped North Central resident Tina Urzan keep unwanted nighttime visitors from her porch. "One night I went out and they were all sitting there eating pizza," said Urzan, 55, who owns the Olde Judge Mansion, a bed and breakfast on Sixth Avenue. "You would have to say, 'It's not public property -- it's my house!' " - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine