Pubdate: Sun, 08 Mar 2009 Source: Fayetteville Observer (NC) Copyright: 2009 Fayetteville Observer Contact: http://www.fayobserver.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/150 Author: Drew Brooks DRUG ARRESTS SHOCK LINDEN'S RESDIENTS LINDEN - Gossip has a way of channeling through the Heads of State Hair Salon on Main Street. This month, the hot topic is drugs. On Feb. 26, agents from the Cumberland County Bureau of Narcotics arrested 10 people on the outskirts of this small town on the county's northeastern edge. The arrests came six months into an investigation of drug-related crime in the area. Agents seized marijuana, cocaine, prescription drugs, money and weapons during a search of six homes. The arrests have caused shock and disbelief in Linden, where 132 people live. "It hits close to home," said Dana Byrd, a stylist at the salon. Byrd said many of her customers know those arrested or their families. Because of those relationships, some residents declined to talk beyond calling the situation "scary" or expressing disbelief. "It is a little shocking," Byrd said. "But when everybody knows everybody, you can't keep that quiet." The arrests are particularly disturbing because Linden is such a small and rural town. Visitors driving in from the west are greeted by a cemetery and several churches. Main Street is little more than a post office, town hall, a volunteer fire department and a mixed bag of homes, farmland and businesses. Linden's churches dominate the landscape as the largest buildings in town, aside from an abandoned brick schoolhouse. Pastor Wayne T. Bone of Linden First Baptist Church said the town has for the most part stayed true to the "old-timey core values" that once covered the Bible Belt. Religion is very important to the community, he said. Community meetings are advertised through the six or so churches in town, and many of the families in Bone's congregation have attended services for generations. He said the recent arrests have churchgoers concerned. "We are praying that God will intervene," he said. "They don't need the drugs; they just need the Lord." Bone's church provides an outreach program. He said his congregation has been repeatedly told to "love the sinner but hate the sin." The community is prepared to do what it can to help those caught up in drugs, he said. "Church exists for others, not just its members," Bone said. "There's a place that they can come to and get some help." Byrd, the salon stylist, said many residents in the Linden area have seen a recent up-tick in crime. "We expect it out of Fayetteville," Byrd said. "But it's everywhere." The post office was broken into, and Byrd's employer has been the victim of break-ins and vandalism. Byrd said the hope is that crime will stop now that arrests have been made. Small-town probe Sheriff's Office spokeswoman Debbie Tanna said Linden's small-town atmosphere could potentially create complications for investigators. "Conducting surveillance in rural areas can be tricky," she said. "We are only as good as our informants." Before searching the homes, informants were sent to buy drugs from the suspects, according to search warrants. During the search, agents looked for drugs, drug money, weapons, paraphernalia and personal papers. Charged in the raids were: Daniel James Bowden, 50, of the 3100 block of Fieldstone Drive; William James Hair, 58, and his wife, Alice Faye Hair, 52, both of the 8100 block of Challenger Drive; Brandy Lynn Miller, 18, and Michael Wayne Wright, 28, both of the 1100 block of Palestine Road; Odell Surles, 63, of the 4800 block of Pine Street; James David Carter, 53, and Teresa Lee Reed, 48, both of the 8200 block of Colliers Chapel Church Road; Violet Marie Reed, 38, of the 6200 block of Crocket Raynor Road; and William Antron Tearry, 28, of the 4900 block of Pine Street. Tanna said those arrested did not represent a single drug network but instead were separate entities, in some ways interconnected. She said the different cells often traded among themselves or with operations in surrounding counties. Tanna said the drug problem is no better or worse in Linden than in other parts of the county. Drug seizures up Department statistics show that the amount of drugs seized or bought by county narcotics agents has risen in the last three years. One agent said cocaine and marijuana continue to be the drugs of choice, with prescription drug abuse on the rise. "That's the new thing that's out there," he said. But while the numbers have risen, the county has largely avoided some of the drug problems of its neighbors. In the last three years, county agents have seized slightly more than 175 marijuana plants. In Harnett County, 70,000 plants were seized last summer alone. Tanna said methamphetamine production is down in Cumberland County because of stricter regulations of over-the-counter drugs used to make it. But in neighboring Sampson County, methamphetamine operations drew the attention of federal prosecutors. Eight people pleaded guilty to production late last year. At the time, U.S. Attorney George E.B. Holding referred to Sampson County's methamphetamine problems as an "epidemic." Linden is just south of the Harnett County line. Tanna said some buyers and sellers related to the Linden drug arrests came from that county. Since drugs are not contained by county lines, Tanna said, it is important for investigators to work with other law enforcement agencies. During the Linden search, agents from the state Department of Revenue seized thousands of dollars worth of personal property, vehicles and cash. Tax levies are being assessed against the property, according to the Sheriff's Office. Byrd said crime has been a popular topic of conversation for some time in the town. Following the arrests, she said, the comments are increasingly the same. "I think they're tired of it," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin