Pubdate: Fri, 23 Oct 2009 Source: Telegraph-Journal (Saint John, CN NK) Copyright: 2009 Brunswick News Inc. Contact: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/onsite.php?page=contact Website: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2878 Author: Jeff Ducharme Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) 'NOT A GOOD DAY TO BE A DRUG DEALER' Police Promise Not To Rest On Their Laurels Following The Biggest Drug Bust In City History SAINT JOHN - The world of drug dealers is a murky place governed by paranoia and populated by cagey and shadowy figures. If police want to infiltrate that world, they have to become part of it. Operation Portland, which netted 48 people and resulted in 120 charges, used three undercover officers who infiltrated street-level and mid-level drug dealers. For six months they lived in a world that most only see on TV or read about in the news. Const. Darin Clarke was one of three undercover officers used in the operation. Calling them drug cells, Clarke said undercover officers had to assume a believable role. "The drug world is constantly changing," Clarke said. Looking from the outside in wasn't an option. Police set up a number of fake companies to build covers for the officers. They were set up as common citizens yet unbeknownst to their targets - the drug dealers - there was nothing common about the people they were selling drugs to. "We were surprised at how high (Clarke) could infiltrate," said Sgt. John Wilcox, who headed the operation. The drug buys were made on the street and in bars from a cross-section of dealers. Mid-level dealers supply the street dealers. In at least one case, a wire - a recording device hidden on an officer or informant - was used and intelligence gathered. While the undercover officer played a game of cat and mouse with a particular target, a team of police officers watched and waited. With an agreed upon signal, the cover team would rush in and bring the operation to an end. But that never happened. "There were all kinds of moments - not knowing who was coming through the door," Clarke said in a non-chalant tone as he sat in an office chair and leaned to one side. But, said Clarke, it's not bravado. It's just a job. Even the street level dealers are carrying guns or weapons of some kind. Those weapons are mostly to protect themselves from other dealers and not police. Infighting is rampant and the competition often steals drugs and money from each other. "To date we haven't reached that level of threat," Wilcox said. Most of the drug buys involved crack cocaine. The marijuana that was purchased was used to build trust and get to the next level. In a small city the drug world is just as tiny. All the players know each other and that complicates the final days of the operation. Arrests have to be planned so the warning can't be sounded to other dealers, some of whom often live right next door. "It's an extremely daunting task," said Clarke. One of the north end homes raided by the force's heavily armed emergency services unit was the target of a drive-by shooting earlier in the year. When police raided the house, they found drugs and a 9mm pistol. With the six-month operation winding down, the days have become long and the sleep rare for the officers involved in the operation. On Wednesday, all three courtrooms at provincial court were pressed into service to deal with the people netted in Operation Portland. "To close the operation is bloody exhausting," said Wilcox, the bags evident under his eyes and his speech dragging. "It's a feverish pace." While the operation hit almost every part of the city, the drug-plagued old north end was front and centre. Following the arrests, which began on Oct. 18, Wilcox said the cellphones that north end drug dealers use to run their businesses have fallen silent and are not being answered. An eerie calm hangs over the streets. "You could drive over and hear a pin drop," Wilcox said. "She's quiet. It's nice to see the community get a break from it." For Clarke, Operation Portland was the most successful operation he's ever been involved in during his nine years as an undercover officer. Not only were 48 people arrested, more than he's seen in one operation, he caught two people he's been chasing for almost decade. "Not a good day to be a drug dealer," Clarke said. And for those who slid under the net this time, Wilcox said there will be a next time. "Who we didn't get this month we'll get next month or the month after," Wilcox said. "The gloves are off. We're coming." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D