Pubdate: Fri, 01 Aug 2008 Source: Brattleboro Reformer (VT) Copyright: 2008 Brattleboro Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.reformer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/59 Author: Nicole One Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) POLICE TACKLE COCAINE IN BARS BRATTLEBORO -- While it is up for debate whether marijuana is a gateway drug, Brattleboro Police have found it to be a gateway for investigations. The initiative started as a way to get drug dealers out of the Harmony Parking Lot and downtown area, most of whom were selling marijuana or pills. Now, it has expanded to include cocaine and heroine sales in downtown bars. This expansion led to the arrest of Pedro Santiago, 36, of Brattleboro earlier this month for possession of cocaine. The drugs seized had been broken down and packaged for sale, police said. The idea of the investigations, Detective Mark Carignan said, was to make the Harmony Lot and downtown a fun, safe place for people to go. "The whole investigation is less about addressing drug problems and more about addressing the quality of life downtown for businesses, residents and the people who visit," he said. "We want to make it difficult for them to do it downtown and that either drives them to other locations or indoors. This enforcement we're doing is not going to reduce the use or distribution of drugs, but we're trying to drive it out of the public forum." While the sale of cocaine, and to a lesser degree heroine, does not seem to be affecting the quality of life for people visiting downtown, it is a problem. "If you wanted to find cocaine, you could find it in pretty much under 20 minutes in downtown," Carignan said. "It's not a problem in that you can't avoid seeing it, but if you want it, it's there." The Vermont Department of Health reported two cases of people dying from cocaine in Windham County last year. Over the last three years, there have been four deaths. This figure does not include people from Windham County who were brought to hospitals outside of the county and died there. Of the 2,637 drug crimes in Vermont in 2006, cocaine was the second-rated drug involved, with 290, or 11 percent of the crimes. There were also 102 cases involving crack cocaine. Marijuana was involved in 67 percent. Carignan said this initiative did not mean the drug problems downtown have escalated, only the scope of the investigation. The bars are generally helpful with fighting the problem, he said. "Having people selling drugs in your bar can lead to other problems in the bar which can leads to problems with their liquor license." While marijuana sales are generally being conducted by young adults who are supplied by bigger time dealers, cocaine has a slightly different trend, Carignan said, requiring a slightly different way of fighting it. In the past, a group of users would pool money together and one or two of them would travel to Hartford, Conn., Springfield, Mass., or New York City to purchase the drugs, bring them back, divide them up and go their separate ways. Now, Carignan said, the dealers come up from these areas, often recruiting the same users to sell here when they find there is money to be made here. Marijuana dealers, on the other hand, either grow locally or get it from Canada. Busting one seller might mean stopping the grower as well, something that is unlikely to happen with harder drugs. Cocaine and heroine dealers tend to be much more cautious about getting caught than marijuana dealers, Carignan said. Also, the volume of the drugs is smaller, making it harder to spot. More officers are required for these investigations, he said, in order to keep themselves safe. "There's generally more violence associated with cocaine than marijuana," he said. Also, while bigger marijuana dealers are hard to catch with confidential informants because most of the people being arrested would not be facing a substantial enough sentence to convince them to work with the department or are too young, this is the most common way to handle cocaine. "More significant penalties make the people we arrest more likely to work for us, but the propensity for violence by the higher-ups makes it less likely," Carignan said. The large amount of money they could make often allows them to disregard any penalty they might face, Carignan said. The penalties are also less severe in Vermont than in Massachusetts or Connecticut, he said. Also, a number of misconceptions about Vermont add to the problem. Drug dealers believe that police in rural areas will not care or not have the resources to stop them, Carignan said. Initiatives such as this one help to put a stop to that belief, he said, but it is still an issue. Also, drug dealers often enjoy the quieter setting of Brattleboro, where they do not have to worry about roving street crime squads or enemy gangs like in the cities. Often gang members will not wear their colors or start fights with each other here, Carignan said. "They want to keep Vermont a nice, quiet place to sell." It is also easier for drug dealers to scam buyers here, he said. "Because where else are they going to go?" - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin