Pubdate: Wed, 18 Nov 2009 Source: Daily Texan (U of TX at Austin, Edu) Copyright: 2009 Daily Texan Contact: http://www.dailytexanonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/115 Author: Bobby Longoria, Daily Texan Staff BUYERS FEEL 'STING' OF CRACKDOWN APD Undercover Operation Results in Eight Drug-Possession Arrests A man dressed in black with old English letters on his shirt waves a white towel to oncoming traffic, whistles at them and asks "What do you need?" He is a crack dealer with rocks in his pocket looking for a customer - and he's a cop. In an effort to suppress Austin's crack cocaine market, the Austin Police Department made eight drug possession arrests Thursday night during a sting operation in the Georgian neighborhood of North Austin. APD's tactical units conduct drug sting operations, which encompass weekly buy operations that target dealers, and reversal operations that target buyers two to three times a year. "It gains control back of the neighborhood that essentially is under siege," said APD Sgt. Eric De Los Santos. "The goal of this is to make sure or try to recapture that neighborhood from [crack users and dealers] and spread them out so these families and this neighborhood can have some normal semblance of life." De Los Santos supervised the operation that was run by approximately 50 officers in surveillance, processing and undercover roles. He said that on Wednesday officers observed about 40 dealers on the street. Officers began the operation around 7 p.m. Thursday night by first clearing the street of any persons who might have potentially interfered, including other drug dealers. Undercover officers were appropriated into two groups: one stood at the opening of the street, flagged potential customers and directed them to an officer of the second group selling crack cocaine. A hidden camera coupled with several microphones recorded the deals. Once the transaction finished and the customer had the crack in his possession, officers leapt out and arrested the individual for possession of a controlled substance. In less than five minutes, officers cleared the area and prepared for the next customer. Norrell said the audio and video of the transaction provides adequate evidence for prosecutors to prove that a person willingly purchased and possessed crack. During the operation, two men in a white Buick offered crack to undercover officers. Two minutes later, uniformed officers within the operation stopped the vehicle a block away. The driver was found in possession of crack and arrested. Although the passenger did not have any drugs on his person, he, too, was arrested for attempting to sell. Police made a total of 16 arrests Thursday night, encompassing paraphernalia possession, interference charges, outstanding warrants and evasion attempts. "Whether we make lots of arrests or few arrests, when the citizens see police presence out there, they are more intent to call the police and report crimes," said Senior Police Officer Lawrence Davis, who is APD's district representative for the Georgian neighborhood. "They know we are actually backing them up and listening to them." But some groups believe APD's reversal operations may be a form of entrapment and that criminal records simply add another burden to individuals with drug dependency problems. "Reducing recidivism should be a priority," said Matt Simpson, ACLU Texas policy strategist. "Crack is more often a symptom of larger problems, and just punishing someone for possessing a [personal-use] amount is obviously not going to address those underlying problems." Jerry Epstein, Drug Policy Forum of Texas president, said drug sting operations are a bad use of limited APD resources that produces questionable results. "Are we doing this effectively, or are we, in fact, creating more problems than solving when we pick up users and create an atmosphere that, if they don't have a problem, we are creating one?" Epstein said. "If they do have a problem, we need to make treatment available non-coercively." If the person charged with a drug offense is simply a user and does not have a history of violence but shows sign of drug dependency, they may be eligible to be processed through the Travis County Drug Diversion Court. Corinne Hernandez, a social service program coordinator at the court, said the court provides a program that is geared to help users lose their dependency. If users succeed without any violations, their cases may be dismissed. The court receives five to 11 referrals a week that must be screened for eligibility for the program. Hernandez said only 51 percent of people in the program complete it successfully and that whether or not individuals are entrapped by APD with sting operations is not her program's concern. "If [users] have an addiction at all, and they are so fed up that they are going to be taken in by an undercover cop, then maybe there is a problem there," Hernandez said. "I am here to help them address that problem, fix that problem and help them move on with their lives." Austin City Councilman Bill Spelman said the operations are not a form of entrapment and the council's major concern is the effectiveness of police action and the rehabilitation of users. "It's something that needs to be dealt with, but the sky isn't falling," Spelman said. "It's within manageable levels, and the kind of thing the police officers were doing [Thursday] night is an important part of keeping it in manageable levels - not letting it get out of hand." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake