Pubdate: Sun, 14 Sep 2008 Source: Journal Gazette, The (Fort Wayne, IN) Copyright: 2008 The Journal Gazette Contact: http://www.journalgazette.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/908 Author: Jeff Wiehe NO TOLERANCE FOR DRUGS County Directs Warrants Officers To Be Vigilant For Illegal Substances Mark Reed smelled it from the front porch Tuesday. Banging on the door of a red house in the 400 block of DeWald Street, the Allen County police warrants officer was looking for a sex offender wanted for a parole violation. Several of Reed's fellow officers surrounded the home, peeked into windows and talked to neighbors. The last time they came to the home, months before, they arrested the man asleep on a couch inside. This time, they struck out. Nobody was there, but … "Smells like marijuana," Reed said. It's not an unusual odor to be lingering around the people officers deal with. But until recently, it was not unusual for warrants officers to look the other way when they found a small amount of drugs. Not any longer. Infused with younger personnel and a more aggressive outlook, the Allen County warrants officer staff is making additional drug arrests and confiscating more drugs and more guns while serving roughly 11,000 warrants yearly. 'More to the job' Allen County warrants officers find and arrest those with outstanding felony warrants for anything from failure to appear in court to murder. They serve the bulk of the warrants in Allen County. "These (warrants) officers today are not afraid to get involved," said Lt. Scott Huffine, head of the Allen County Sheriff's Warrants Division, who's been in the division for 20 years. "They're getting into things and know there's more to the job. "In the past, if we'd see someone with a little dope, we would maybe just flush it down the toilet or smash up their paraphernalia." Allen County Sheriff Ken Fries changed that, according to officers. He's pushing all his officers to take as many drugs off the streets as they can and to make arrests when they find them, no matter what the officer's division. "If you find them (drugs) and don't make an arrest, the sheriff will call you, and you better have a good reason why you didn't," Huffine said. Through Sept. 3, warrants officers this year have confiscated roughly 32,460 grams of illegal drugs mostly marijuana, but also cocaine, methamphetamine and heroin. They've also snagged 16 guns five of which were stolen and two assault rifles as well as a bulletproof vest, which is illegal to own. Huffine said the department has just started keeping regular statistics on the amount of drugs seized in warrants cases. Digging for more Officers are finding what might seem like small amounts of drugs, but such finds can lead to bigger arrests. "They're diggers," said Cpl. Dean Hoffman, a supervisor in the warrants division, about the officers he oversees. "They know what to look for." When they're in a home, they're constantly scanning for what might be lying out. Tuesday night, while her officers questioned a man and woman inside an apartment, Cpl. Holly Coonrod caught sight of two small plants atop a big-screen television. She whipped out her flashlight and took a closer look, finally deciding they were nothing. Some of the warrants officers, such as Hoffman, believe changing attitudes about drugs have led to easier confiscations. People treat the drugs they carry like their cell phones or cigarettes they always have them at hand. "People are a lot more free with their drugs," Hoffman said. So a bit of marijuana left on a coffee table can be enough probable cause for a search warrant. That could lead to finding more drugs hidden in a drawer or stashed in a closet. A suspect with a small amount of drugs in his pockets could become an informant for the Allen County Drug Task Force, which handles most of the department's investigations. Big payoffs Then there are times officers find the mother lode. In June, county warrants officers along with U.S. marshals and city police uncovered a possible marijuana trafficking network in a home where they tried to serve a warrant on a man wanted for violating his parole on a drunken-driving conviction. They spotted someone peeking out of the home who would not answer the door, giving them the right to go inside, according to a probable-cause affidavit. They didn't find their man but instead uncovered 70 pounds of marijuana, 8 grams of cocaine, 22 grams of methamphetamines, 15 to 20 cell phones, drug ledgers, fingerprint cleaner and cash. The drugs found in the home were added to the county warrants division's total. Officers also found 10 handguns, five of them stolen, and an assault rifle. "The guns we're finding, that's what bothers me," said Huffine, holding a bulletproof vest. "All this (vest) would do with the assault rifles is make the hole of the bullet a little smaller." Officers arrested a 38-year-old man named Eriberto Serrano, aka Javier Arellanes-Diaz, on charges of dealing cocaine, dealing methamphetamine, possession of a handgun with an obliterated serial number and receiving stolen property. Serrano was released several days after his arrest as Allen County prosecutors have yet to formally charge him with a crime. The case is under investigation, and charges are pending, according to prosecutors. 'It's hit or miss' Peeking in windows, sneaking around homes and knocking on doors throughout the county Tuesday, officers were ever watchful of things that might lead to an arrest similar to Serrano's. They came up empty-handed regarding drugs. Officers made several misdemeanor arrests and found many empty homes, save for one belonging to a woman wanted for felony forgery. Her home was filled with stains, stench, cockroaches and a large flat-screen TV. Child protective services came to remove her six children, ages 2 to 14. "Sometimes it's hit or miss," Officer Gabe Furnish said about a night that yielded little fruit. When trying to serve a misdemeanor warrant at an apartment at Baldwin Creek Apartments on Hobson Road, Furnish found a large chunk of what he thought might be contraband outside a door. He whispered to another officer that it might be methamphetamine. "It was a stale piece of bread," he said. "Just a stale piece of bread." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart