Pubdate: Sun, 16 Nov 2008 Source: Rocky Mount Telegram, The (NC) Copyright: 2008 Cox Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.rockymounttelegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1751 Author: Eric Klamut POLICE: COLLABORATION ON STREET CRIME WORKING The Rocky Mount Police Department's Street Engagement Team is continuing its efforts to crack down on illegal drugs, firearms and street violence within Rocky Mount. So far this year, the SET team has seized more than 160 weapons, made significant drug arrests and confiscated large amounts of illegal drugs. Rocky Mount police Capt. Robert Baggett - the division commander who oversees the team - said department wide, police have seized 366 firearms this year. When compared to last year's total of 282, the number is significant, Baggett said. "We've got people that are doing more gun-related work," Baggett said. "We are tougher on illegal guns. We are focusing on drugs, guns and violence." Through collaborating with other divisions such as the department's Uniform Operations Division and the Investigations Division, officers working with the SET team have been involved with cases that range from local to federal, he said. "We are working closer as a police unit," Baggett said of the ongoing cooperation between all of the police divisions." Capt. Martin McCoy, commander of the Investigations Division, said the SET team has become involved with all aspects of police work. "Now, that unit is intertwined in the entire police department," McCoy said. "It does what no other unit has done before. It's leaps and bounds from what any other unit has done before." McCoy gave an example of a recent shooting that occurred on Baber Court Wednesday evening. The SET team responded to the scene to assist investigators, who then assigned SET officers to the case. In a matter of hours, McCoy said, the suspect was taken into police custody and charged. Another example of the cooperation between the divisions is a recent traffic stop that yielded more than $25,000 worth of cocaine. Capt. Laura Fahnestock, commander of the Uniform Operations Division, said a recent case involved a patrol officer stopping a vehicle for a stop sign violation. That incident, she said, led to the discovery of more than 250 grams of cocaine. "Even the patrol officers are looking for guns and drugs," Fahnestock said, adding that younger officers in the patrol division learn tactics from SET officers. Baggett said because of the nature of their work, officers on the SET team sometimes put in up to 24 hours because of the intensity of the job in addition to weekly training sessions. "That happens more than people think," Baggett said. "They go beyond because it's what they believe in." McCoy said that because the SET team is involved in all of the Rocky Mount police divisions, officers are training together across the board. "The importance of working together and training together is that everyone has a more direct buy-in from the bottom to the top," McCoy said, adding division commanders are constantly meeting on a daily basis. Since its inception in August 2007, the SET team has made more than 3,777 criminal and traffic-related arrests. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin