Pubdate: Sun, 18 Feb 2007 Source: Daily Gazette (Sterling, IL) Copyright: 2007 Sauk Valley Newspapers Contact: http://www.saukvalley.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3247 Author: Jim Butts Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) POLICE CROSS COUNTY LINES TO TACKLE COCAINE STERLING - From a secure location, an undercover officer peered through binoculars, looking for movement at a house on a busy Sterling street, well known to police. Dressed in torn blue jeans, the Black Hawk Area Drug Task Force officer barked his observations into a pair of cell phones, one in each hand. On the other end were police from Sterling, Rock Falls, the Whiteside County Sheriff's Department and the Illinois State Police - a total of 17 officers - taking part in a joint drug operation. Recent drug activity and related violence in Sterling and Rock Falls - - stabbings, shootings and two homicides - led to the joint operation. The collaborative effort represents a growing trend among Sauk Valley law enforcement who, now more than ever, are sharing intelligence, equipment and personnel in the battle against the illegal drug epidemic. "It's my opinion - and I think the other agency heads would echo this - - that cooperation in Whiteside County has never been better," said Master Sgt. John Biffany of the Illinois State Police. Biffany leads the Black Hawk Area Task Force, a unit that specifically fights the drug trade in Carroll, Henry, Lee, Ogle and Whiteside counties. "I've been on the state police for 18 years, and it has never been better than it is right now," he said. In the past, agencies sometimes duplicated efforts - for example, both Sterling police and Illinois State police would build a criminal case against the same suspect. "Those days are gone," Biffany said. These days, area police departments are in constant communication. Dixon police have been in contact with Sterling officers about 20 times in the last six months when investigations crossed county lines, Dixon Detective Sgt. Dan Langloss said. "The (dealers) living in their area are affecting our area," Langloss said. "There's always been a decent relationship, but we're definitely working closer now than we ever have." Lee County State's Attorney Paul Whitcombe, Dixon, Amboy and Franklin Grove police and the Lee County Sheriff's Department formed the Lee County Organized Crime Task Force to share intelligence on known and suspected gang members and their activities, and to coordinate law enforcement resources to keep gangs out of the area. Their efforts already are showing results. Take Jay "Blanco" Randolph, 25, of Franklin Grove, whom police said they suspected of supplying cocaine to area youth. The task force worked together to get him off the street, by establishing a case based on the theft of a video game. Twenty-two days after his arrest, Randolph pleaded guilty and began serving a two-year prison sentence. Many agencies also are putting more resources into fighting the drug trade. Whiteside County Sheriff Roger Schipper said deputies are putting extra emphasis on conducting drug busts with the help of informants. Those operations are nothing new to many local police. As head of Sterling's detective division, Sgt. Doug Fargher said his officers are up to their necks in drug investigations, which led to nearly 40 people being arrested in Whiteside County last year for dealing or intending to deal cocaine. That doesn't include those arrested for possession of cocaine, or investigations into other drugs, such as marijuana. "We could do more if we could keep up with paperwork," Fargher said. About two years ago, Fargher made the executive decision to pull detectives off cases involving bad checks or credit card fraud. Although addicts are likely to commit such crimes to fund their drug habit, Fargher found that investigating them took to much time away from drug investigations. Such fraud cases are now handled by patrol officers, but even they have limited time, Fargher said. Whiteside County State's Attorney Gary Spencer estimates 90 percent of all the criminal cases he prosecutes have drug addiction as their root cause. Sterling Police Chief Ron Pothoff said his department, too, has decided to focus its efforts on the drug trade, and make it as "unpleasant and unprofitable for the dealers to set up shop." "We can trace symptoms of crime, or go right after the drug dealers," Fargher said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman