Pubdate: Wed, 13 Feb 2008 Source: Simcoe Reformer, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 Annex Publishing & Printing Inc. Contact: http://simcoereformer.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2386 Author: Daniel Pearce TWO YEARS LATER, TRIALS IN DRUG BUST NEARING END Whereabouts Of One Drug Kingpin Is Unknown The final cases resulting from a major drug sweep that helped clean up downtown Simcoe are headed to court. Trials have been scheduled for Sherry Lee Maas and Kelvin Cunningham, who face charges of trafficking. The pair are two of 40 people arrested following an undercover sting in which a male and a female police officer posed as small-time drug dealers looking to make buys. They kept track of who had sold them drugs -- mainly Simcoe residents police later picked up in a massive takedown one day in September 2006. Federal prosecutor Jamie Pereira said the sweep, dubbed operation Big Mac, was successful given almost all of the charges have led to guilty pleas. Sentences have ranged from a few weeks behind bars to penitentiary terms. Michael Gustin, one of two kingpins of the downtown drug scene, got three years in prison while the other, Kenneth Morris, jumped bail before he was sentenced. "We don't know where he is," said Pereira. When Morris is put behind bars, it will put an end to a chapter in the story of Simcoe's core. As the state of downtown declined, it reached a low in 2005. Empty stores, vandalism, and open drug dealing were the norm. Things culminated with a drug-related shooting on Norfolk Street South that fall. Police responded with a street team, increased patrols, and the undercover operation. "I like to think it's getting better," Pereira said of the state of downtown. "Obviously, there's still a problem there." Incoming Norfolk OPP Superintendent Zvonko Horvat said police will continue to keep an eye on what's going on in the core. "We haven't eliminated all the drug activities in the downtown core, but we have put a dent into it," Horvat said. He described the dealers arrested as being "street-level to mid-level." But Big Mac, he added, also directly led to arrests of dealers in Hamilton and Dunnville. Police consider drugs a serious social problem, Horvat said. "You look at the root cause of any problem and it comes back to drugs. Drug activity has a significant impact on the quality of life for everybody." Many of the dealers picked up in the sweep were "selling just to support their habit," Pereira said. One woman who was sentenced to weekends in jail told the undercover cops rumours were rampant they were police but she didn't believe that and would sell to them anytime. Others were in it for profit, Pereira said. "Individuals can make a lot of money. It's tax-free. But at some point, they all get caught." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek