Pubdate: Wed, 06 Jun 2007 Source: News & Observer (Raleigh, NC) Copyright: 2007 The News and Observer Publishing Company Contact: http://www.newsobserver.com/484/story/433256.html Website: http://www.news-observer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/304 Author: Josh Shaffer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?228 (Paraphernalia) PASTOR: 'PEN' IS USED FOR CRACK He Asks Raleigh to Ban Sale of Device RALEIGH - All the tools for smoking crack cocaine -- minus the drug - -- can be easily purchased at Raleigh convenience stores. On Tuesday night, the City Council got an up-close look. The Rev. Melvin Whitley brought his purchases from four Southeast Raleigh convenience stores to City Hall, asking the council to ban the sale of "pen in a glass," commonly used as a pipe for smoking drugs. Buy a glass case with a cheap pen cartridge inside for roughly $3.50, add a shred of Chore Boy scrubber for a filter, and you've got an easy route to drug addiction, Whitley said. He bought them all Tuesday at stores on Bragg, Haywood, East Martin and Haywood streets and had the council and City Attorney Thomas McCormick look over the items. "Every address I gave you was a high-crime area," he said. "They only sell them in high-crime areas." The council voted to send the issue to its Law and Public Safety Commission for more study. "There are certain communities that are being affected in a very negative way," Councilman James West said. Stores may not even know how the pen-pipes are used, said Daniel Coleman, president of the Raleigh-Wake Citizens Association. He asked that the city publicize the unintended consequences on "the off chance that there are retail outlets that are offering these items wondering why so many are being sold." Glass pipes disguised as household items also come as a vase for tiny roses. Whitley has already fought "love roses" in Durham, helping to enact a $500 fine for stores that sell the tubes of fake flowers. The pens and roses are sold under the counter -- not on public display. You have to look the part to get a clerk to pull them out, Whitley said, but a recent experiment by The News & Observer showed that part is easy to play. Big John's Community Grocery on Edenton Street sold one with no questions asked. Whitley said Tuesday night he was encouraged that the council will at least talk about curbing the sales, and he is hoping Fayetteville and Wilmington will follow suit. A House bill would require pen-in-a-glass buyers to furnish photo identification and have their names stay on a registry for two years, but Whitley said it is stalled. "This is not a household item," Whitley said. "They are making money off people's misery - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake