Pubdate: Sun, 26 Feb 2006 Source: Des Moines Register (IA) Copyright: 2006 The Des Moines Register. Contact: http://desmoinesregister.com/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/123 Author: Erin Jordan, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) EASTERN IOWA FACES UNLIKELY OUTBREAK OF HEROIN The case of a 13-year-old runaway from Minneapolis who was kidnapped and brought to eastern Iowa has led to investigations of child prostitution and heroin trafficking, rare crimes in rural America. "I think it's an important and compelling case for people to know about," Assistant U.S. Attorney C.J. Williams said of child sex charges against Demont Cortez Bowie, 26, an alleged one-time Minneapolis gang member who had moved to Wellman, Ia. The Bowie investigation was a window into a drug ring connected to a rash of heroin deaths and overdoses in eastern Iowa, law enforcement officers said. After a woman who overdosed on heroin last March in Wellman said she got the drug from Bowie, "We started asking questions about (Bowie's) drug activity," Washington County investigator Mike Clark said. An Iowa County heroin death was also connected to the Bowie investigation, said Sheriff Nick Roggentien. Williams declined to confirm a link between the Bowie case and a heroin probe, saying he could not acknowledge an ongoing investigation. Records show that the U.S. attorney's office for the Northern District of Iowa has charged six Cedar Rapids residents in the last six months with distributing heroin, and Williams did say he was alarmed by the 24 heroin deaths in Iowa in 2004 and 2005 -- 20 of which occurred in eastern Iowa. Bowie, who Clark said was known to give out samples of heroin to promote sales in eastern Iowa, was a small player in a larger game of prostitution and drugs, investigators said. Authorities say Bowie came to their attention after an incident that began on March 17, 2005, in Minneapolis. Records say Bowie picked up a 13-year-old girl, referred to in court records as M.B. Bowie, who had been living in Wellman, visited the Twin Cities to check in with his parole officer, he told U.S. Magistrate John A. Jarvey during a Jan. 6 hearing in which he pleaded guilty of kidnapping as part of a plea deal. Bowie, known in earlier days as "D-Boy" to members of the Bloods street gang in Minneapolis, was on parole after serving prison time for assault charges in 1999, Minnesota court records show. Bowie told prosecutors that the 13-year-old girl performed oral sex on him and that he forced her to have oral sex with an auto mechanic in exchange for a discount on van repairs. Once in Iowa, Bowie prostituted the girl for money and drugs, prosecutors said. Toni Debler, Bowie's ex-girlfriend, said he told her the girl was 18. The girl stayed at Debler's Wellman house for a couple of weeks after they returned from Minneapolis, but Debler said she did not know Bowie had involved the girl in prostitution. Last Easter Sunday, March 27, Bowie took the 13-year-old to the Williamsburg house his father, Robert Andre Sallis Sr., 47, shared with Betty Jo Thompson, 34. Bowie got into a fight with his father and fled when police showed up, prosecutors said. The girl stayed behind, where "Bowie's father, together with his girlfriend, employed the girl in prostitution in northeast Iowa, including Cedar Rapids" from March 28 to mid-April, according to a Jan. 6 news release from the U.S. attorney. Sallis and Thompson have not been charged in the case. Meanwhile, Bowie's reputation was growing in Wellman, Clark said. He was picked up for drunken driving on March 26 and officers later got an anonymous report that he was carrying a gun, Clark said. He also persuaded a Wellman man with a valid driver's license to drive him up to Iowa City to sell drugs, Clark said. "He started cutting a pretty wide swath," Clark said of Bowie. In late March, a 911 call alerted officers to a possible heroin overdose at a Wellman house, Clark said. The young woman, who originally thought she might have been raped while in a heroin-induced stupor, said Bowie gave her the drug, Clark said. "She doesn't remember a thing after that," he said. In late April, the 13-year-old girl, who had taken a bus back to Minnesota and is now with her parents, wrote a letter to the Washington County Sheriff's Department describing the kidnapping and prostitution, Clark said. The letter was forwarded to the U.S. attorney's office, which later charged Bowie. Bowie was arrested June 10 at a Coralville apartment. His sentencing date on the federal kidnapping charge to which he pleaded guilty has not yet been set. He faces 20 years to life in prison, but how much time he serves will depend on the information he provides federal prosecutors, Williams said. "He has knowledge of other people who had contact with this girl," Williams said. Bowie also has knowledge about the source of the high-purity heroin coming into eastern Iowa, Washington County's Clark said. "He's a little fish in the bigger scheme of life," he said. The heroin charges filed by Williams against five men and one woman range from conspiring to deliver more than 100 grams of the drug to distributing heroin within 1,000 feet of a Cedar Rapids elementary school. Five have been found guilty or made plea deals. Paperwork on those charges does not mention Bowie. Heroin, an opiate that slows a user's heartbeat and breathing, usually comes to Iowa from Chicago, said Marvin Van Haaften, director of the Governor's Office of Drug Control Policy. When the drug was first popular in the 1970s, it was less than 10 percent pure. The purity of heroin found recently in eastern Iowa has been as great as 80 percent, said Rick LaMere, a federal Drug Enforcement Administration agent in Cedar Rapids. Drug dealers in Iowa may be seeking a new market for heroin by offering the high-purity product, which can be snorted instead of injected, LaMere said. This avoids the risk and stigma of needles. "Meth used to be very pure at a cheaper price," LaMere said about methamphetamine, which has been one of Iowa's biggest drug problems in recent years. "Meth labs are down because of the pseudoephedrine law. Is there another drug popping up? These are the questions we are asking." {SIDEBARS} Heroin In Iowa: Drug On The Rise Heroin, an opiate that slows a user's heartbeat and breathing, usually comes from Chicago, state drug officials said. A significant number of arrests, and heroin-related deaths, have taken place in eastern Iowa the past two years. 14 Heroin Deaths In Iowa In 05 Heroin contributed to the deaths of 14 people in Iowa in 2005, according to the state medical examiner's office. This is 13 percent of all nonalcohol drug deaths -- a large share for a substance that accounts for only a sliver of drug seizures. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Service Administration in 2003 reported on drug deaths in six states. Maine and Maryland reported no deaths. Vermont had four and New Hampshire six. While New Mexico reported 73, Utah had 33. Increased Purity, Increased Potency When the drug was first popular in the 1970s, it was less than 10 percent pure. The purity of heroin found recently in eastern Iowa has been as great as 80 percent. Connection To Iowa's Meth Laws Iowa lawmakers have passed tough legislation to help slow meth use in the state. The laws appear to be working. But is heroin the next drug Iowa must tackle? "Meth labs are down because of the pseudoephedrine law," said Rick LaMere, a federal Drug Enforcement Administration agent. "Is there another drug popping up? These are the questions we are asking." The Iowa medical examiner's office reported 24 deaths in 2004 and 2005 in which heroin or its byproducts contributed to the cause of death. Here is a breakdown by county of those deaths: 1 - Cerro Gordo, 1- Pottawattamie, 2 - Polk, 1 - Marion, 1 - Wapello, 7 - Linn, 2 - Johnson, 1 - Johnson, 1 - Clinton, 7 - Scott. (MAP Editor Note: These numbers shown on a map - Johnson county listed twice, once obviously an error for county north of Clinton County.) Demont Cortez Bowie Demont Cortez Bowie, 26, of Wellman pleaded guilty Jan. 6 to federal kidnapping charges for taking a 13-year-old girl from Minneapolis and prostituting her for money and drugs. Investigation into this case provided a window into a rash of heroin arrests and overdoses in eastern Iowa. BOWIE HAS CRIMINAL CONVICTIONS IN IOWA AND MINNESOTA THAT INCLUDE: FIRST-DEGREE BURGLARY* 1999, Hennepin County, Minn. SECOND-DEGREE ASSAULT 1999, Hennepin County, Minn. TAMPERING WITH A WITNESS 2000, Johnson County DRUNKEN DRIVING June 16, 2005, Washington County TRESPASS Sept. 27, 2005, Johnson County FAILURE TO REGISTER AS A SEX OFFENDER* Sept. 29, 2005, Washington County INTERSTATE KIDNAPPING Jan. 6, U.S. District Court Northern District of Iowa *Bowie was required to register as a sex offender after the 1999 burglary conviction because it was considered a predatory offense. Source: Court records - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman