Pubdate: Mon, 26 Nov 2007 Source: Belfast Telegraph (UK) Copyright: 2007 Belfast Telegraph Newspapers Ltd. Contact: http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/42 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hallucinogens.htm (Hallucinogens) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) POLICE MUST WAKE UP TO DRUGS ON THE STREET The harrowing deaths of Dean Clarke, Shane O'Connor and Danielle Gibbens have brought into sharp focus the tragedy that can strike teenage addicts. Here, one former user recalls how his teenage life was engulfed by drugs and the horrors that went with them The recent drug-related deaths of two Ulster teenagers, Dean Clarke and Shane O'Connor, have thrown into sharp relief the extent of the drug problem in Northern Ireland. They have prompted soul-searching and provoked anger and grief. Sadly, for me, these cries are nothing new. On Friday, October 5, 19-year-old Danielle Gibbens died after taking what is believed to have been ecstasy. Danielle was from Ballykelly, a village in Co Derry about five minutes drive from my home town of Limavady, where she initially collapsed. Drugs have long been a problem in Limavady. More than half of my lifetime ago, at the age of 14, I became involved myself. For a few weeks I watched my friends taking the powerful hallucinogen, LSD. At first alarmed, after a time I became inured to the fear. They seemed to be having a good time. I am an inquisitive person. I knew where I could buy drugs and I did so. At that time, drugs were less prevalent, and accordingly, knowledge of drugs among concerned parties - parents, schools, perhaps even the police - was limited. We were still in the "just-say-no" era. The image portrayed was one of heroin addicts dying regularly, associations with needles and Aids. The element of fear engendered by such crude scare tactics was apt to be blown out of the water by the actual experience. As with most 14-year-olds, of course I knew best. My Friday pocket money of UKP 5 began going to the dealer weekly and I was introduced to a world which was exciting, forbidden, dangerous. I came from a middle class family and was sheltered. Exploring life's underbelly was fascinating to me, particularly when it appeared I had been lied to - not by people who used drugs, but by the aforementioned concerned parties. Within a year I was using cannabis daily and ecstasy weekly, the prevalence of LSD now on the wane. My circle of friends had changed. I was now 'one of the boys'. The thing was that ecstasy at that time cost UKP 20 per tablet. They were tremendously strong. I didn't realise it at the time, but I was already well on my way to developing a habit. My UKP 5-a-week rate of pocket money however remained the same. What was I to do? Being 'one of the boys', I had a customer base all set up. The market dictated that if I bought in bulk I could sell the pills and make a profit. I had no need of cash (I couldn't very well show up at home in new clothes and bling without raising eyebrows), but two or three pills and 'a bit of smoke' for myself as profit would do me. It felt harmless. "If you fly with the crows you can expect to be shot at," was my father's favourite refrain if I got caught in a scrape at school. Limavady is not a big town. The crows' youthful folly, self-assuredness and bravado combined to ensure it was not long before the police became aware of me. Just having turned 16, I was on a coach headed for a nightclub in Portrush which was surrounded by the police and brought to a halt. The police swarmed onto the bus and body searched everyone who had been on board. Drugs were recovered from near where I was sitting. A person was arrested and we were allowed to carry on. From friends I began to hear that the drug squad, who orchestrated the raid on the bus, had been visiting their houses. I was expecting the knock, which came a few days later. I was invited to the station for an interview. My friends hadn't been, and I when I enquired why, I was told that in my case the situation was more serious. During the interview, accompanied by my father, I told the police the bus had come from Derry, through Limavady on the way to Portrush. The drugs could have belonged to anybody, they might well have been there before I even boarded. Reluctantly they released me without charge. They didn't believe me. In another few days, while walking home, a car drew alongside me and two drug squad officers ordered me to get in. They took me to a secluded wood just outside the town, asking along the way what I was doing at school and other small talk. They were being friendly. When we pulled up, they insisted they knew the drugs belonged to me and that if I didn't cooperate, I would be charged. Now more 'frightened kid' than 'one of the boys', I hadn't the cop-on to know this was bluff. I was instructed to keep my eyes open and if I knew of something that would be in a house or a car, or in someone's possession, I was to call them immediately. Otherwise we were to meet "for a chat" once a week and I would be left alone. I met the police twice more and told them nothing. They didn't seem satisfied with my protestations that I wasn't as involved as they thought, or as I had pretended to be. I couldn't tell them what I didn't know. I stopped meeting them and again awaited the knock at the door. It didn't. More time passed and I was again approached by them and ordered into their car. Again I was taken to the wood outside the town. There was no friendly chat this time. In typical good cop/bad cop routine, good cop said nothing much, bad cop erupted, Vesuvius-like. He dragged me from the car and demanded that I provide them with information or I wouldn't be left alone. They drove off, leaving me to walk home, well past the 11pm curfew that had now been set by my parents, and covered in mud. "There are stringent internal and external mechanisms in place to ensure intelligence is handled and managed properly," said PSNI Assistant Chief Constable Peter Sheridan in this paper. Was my experience protocol? "We have a set of policies and procedures in place which will withstand any scrutiny," he wrote. Tragedy struck in our family when my sister died the following year, and my drug use escalated to the point where I had developed what was now a proper habit, with all the problems attendant to that. I was dealing again on a much bigger scale and with a partner who had a house. My intake of drugs was massive. I was now involved with very dangerous people who, I am fairly certain, were among the biggest in the province. They were only one step down the ladder from importers. They were notoriously violent, ruthless career criminals, and they could have been very easily caught. It appeared to me, as someone on the street, that there wasn't the will among the police. Having become paranoid and weighing eight and a half stone at a height of 6'2 ", I went to the family doctor and was referred to a counsellor. I had temporarily stopped taking drugs, my parents were informed by the GP, and I attended two counselling sessions before temptation got the better of me and I scored some pills to take to a club. While waiting for the bus with a group of friends, two car loads of police surrounded me. Expecting a body search, I put my arms out, which were placed behind my back as I was told I would be strip-searched at the station. I was caught. "You know the routine. If you tell us what we want to hear, you could walk out of here without even a charge," I was told. Now 17 ? a grey area in the eyes of the law which means you can be tried as an adult or a juvenile, I was told I couldn't have my father present at interview. My solicitor said I could. I came clean and admitted I had been dealing for some time, told them of my habit, and the counsellor, and the death in the family, which they knew about anyway. My case was to be heard in the Crown Court. I wasn't even afraid so much as exhausted. My honesty won me six charges to answer. Ten years later, the dealers I was involved with in Limavady are still on the street, they are still dealing and Danielle Gibbons is dead. I was incredibly lucky to come from a middle class family. The death of my sister; character witnesses speaking in my favour; the fact that I had sought help before I was caught; that I had an offer of good work in London after college; the support I had, all added up to my being given three years suspended for three years. If my background had been less fortunate, as is often the case with teenage drug abusers, I can only imagine the course of action the police took would have served simply to immerse me further into that seedy world, fraught with all kinds of danger. Assistant Chief Constable Sheridan's method of intelligence gathering may look good in theory, but in practice, as far as I have seen, it does not. What I didn't tell my friendly "handler" was that on any given Friday night I went to pick up my supply, my hundred pills were counted out of a shopping bag containing at least a thousand, which were stashed in an open outdoor shed at the back of the dealer's house. Had some police initiative been taken, rather than spinning the tout wheel in futility with all the variables that involves, the intentions of the dealers, the arrest record of ambitious lower-ranking officers, Danielle Gibbens might have lived to see her 20th birthday. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake