Pubdate: Sat, 12 May 2007 Source: Greensboro News & Record (NC) Copyright: 2007 Greensboro News & Record, Inc. Contact: http://www.news-record.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/173 Author: Taft Wireback UNDERCOVER STING NABS SIX STORES FOR DRUG VIOLATIONS You're a store clerk and a customer walks up to the cash register with a set of digital scales, then says, "Man, I want to buy these to weigh my cocaine." What do you do? Hint: The correct answer is not "Complete the sale." Six convenience-store owners in High Point learned that lesson the hard way Friday as they and some of their employees were cited for allegedly making such sales to undercover agents. Officers from the state Division of Alcohol Law Enforcement and the High Point Police Department issued citations for drug violations at four stores on various parts of Green Drive, and at one each on Kivett Drive and West English Road. Undercover detectives bought scales, smoking pipes, rolling papers, plastic bags and cigars, none of which amounted to a crime until the purchaser told the clerk about their purported use with drugs, said ALE investigator Chris Poole . "They should have refused to sell at that point," Poole said. Cigars become a type of drug paraphernalia when the purchaser cuts them open, removes the tobacco and replaces it with marijuana, Poole said. Clerks who allegedly completed such sales will be charged with misdemeanor offenses involving possession and delivery of drug paraphernalia. Misdemeanors are the less serious category of crime, punishable by a jail sentence but often resolved with probation and fines. The store owners face the potential loss of their licenses to sell beer and wine, suspension of those licenses or fines. Each store will be reported to the state Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission, which has the power to impose any of those penalties or a combination of fines and suspensions, Poole said. Stores that have ABC permits are prohibited from knowingly allowing drug violations of any sort at their businesses. "When someone has an ABC permit, that person is responsible for the actions of his employees and anything that occurs on the licensed premises," Poole said. High Point police and ALE agents began the investigation after receiving a number of complaints about stores selling material for drug-abuse purposes, he said. Undercover investigators tried to buy such material at 20 stores , but were turned down at most after revealing their purpose was drug use, Poole said. "When you check 20 places and 14 won't sell, that says most people know such sales aren't legal," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek