Pubdate: Sun, 03 May 2009 Source: Winnipeg Sun (CN MB) Copyright: 2009 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.winnipegsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/503 Author: Chris Kitching, Sun Media Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) WINNIPEG'S ADDICTION TO CRACK COCAINE AN 'EPIDEMIC' Use of crack cocaine, the most sought-after drug on Winnipeg streets, is reaching epidemic proportions in the city, a veteran city police officer said yesterday while revealing details about a substantial bust. Sgt. Rod Hourd of the organized crime unit knows how widespread crack cocaine use is because his team consistently busts mid-to high-level dealers and seizes hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of illicit drugs annually. "I would say we have an epidemic. It's everywhere," Hourd said. "Crack cocaine is very available on the streets of Winnipeg right now." In this latest bust the organized crime unit seized 72 ounces of crack, valued at $108,000, and two one-kilogram bricks of powder cocaine -- which have an estimated value of $110,000 -- from a bigger fish in Winnipeg's drug trade. "Any time you get this amount, it will probably be tied to the gangs somewhere," said police spokesman Const. Blair Good. "Somebody somewhere along the way was supposed to get the drugs. It's going to affect somebody down the line." Hourd said the drugs were found in an apartment suite -- a "stash house" -- in the 1000-block of Andrews Street in the North End on April 22. Police arrested a 33-year-old man Thursday. He is facing charges of possession of cocaine for the purpose of trafficking and production of cocaine. The one-ounce chunks of crack, a highly-addictive drug, would have been sold to dealers at a lower level and broken down into hundreds of thousands of quarter-gram rocks, which sell for $20 apiece, Hourd said. The bust prevents those rocks from falling into the hands of users, Hourd said. But police know there are plenty of other dealers out there. "We're trying to stay ahead of them. This helps," Hourd said. The powder cocaine also would have been sold to other dealers and broken down, Hourd said. One-kilogram bricks are often peddled by dealers at a higher level, police say. "Any time we get a brick like this it's always a significant haul for us," Hourd said. Police have long said crack cocaine is a serious blight in Winnipeg and is not confined to the city's poorest areas. The drug is often linked to other crimes. People break the law while high on it, or they commit crimes to get it, like robbing gas bars for drug money or breaking into homes to trade or pawn items for drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D