Pubdate: Mon, 25 Jan 2010 Source: Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN) Copyright: 2010 The Commercial Appeal Contact: http://web.commercialappeal.com/newgo/forms/letters.htm Website: http://www.commercialappeal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/95 THE LIFE OF A COVERT OFFICER Danger is always lurking: The undercover drug deal that went awry last week depicts the perilous work of a covert cop. A frightening reminder of the dangerous nature of police work, especially for undercover officers, played out on a residential street in Southwest Memphis last Wednesday. An undercover Memphis police officer met a crack dealer for what was supposed to be a routine drug sale. The dealer and a 16-year-old accomplice had other ideas, according to police. They pulled guns, demanded money and discovered the officer's recording device before firing a burst of shots at the officer and his partner. The officers were not hit and their cool heads prevented them from returning fire because there was an 18-month-old baby in the suspects' car. The dealer, the teenager and the baby's mother were arrested later. Reporters for The Commercial Appeal over the years have chronicled the work of the Memphis Police Department's undercover operation, which experts have called the nation's best covert police program. In November, as part of this newspaper's "True Crime" series, reporter Kristina Goetz shadowed undercover officer 1335 as he gathered evidence against drug dealers in the Hyde Park and Hollywood areas of North Memphis. "The officers who work deep undercover for MPD alter their entire existence -- their names, their appearance, their tidy, secure personal lives -- to burrow into the city's darkest and most dangerous places where crack is sold openly, where stolen goods are fenced, where prostitution rings thrive," Goetz wrote. It takes a special person to work undercover. Reality is far removed from how such work is depicted in movies and popular literature. It is probably more stressful and dangerous than patrolling the streets in a squad car. The fear of detection and retribution once arrests are made is always present. Undercover officers have to be constantly alert and ready to deal with any number of in-an-instant threatening situations. Wednesday's incident is a prime example of how the expected routine can explode into chaos in a moment. Those bullets fired by the suspects also could have struck a bystander in or near a home in the neighborhood. The incident also demonstrated the character of the officers and the excellent firearms training they receive. If they had lost their cool and returned fire, there could have been a dead infant or a mortally wounded bystander. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart