Pubdate: Wed, 05 Jan 2011 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2011 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Kirk Mitchell SECURITY GUARD AT REHAB CLINIC CHARGED WITH SELLING CRACK TO HOMELESS A security guard at the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless has been arrested for allegedly selling crack cocaine to homeless people undergoing drug rehabilitation at a clinic run by the group. Parrish L. Wright, 45, was charged with four counts of selling drugs after a sting operation in which he allegedly sold crack to a drug-treatment informant and a female undercover police officer, according to court records. The arrest was first reported by Face the State. "For it to be happening within the walls of our building is such an anathema to what we're all about that it is devastating to us," said John Parvensky, president of the homelessness group. Wright, who is free on a $5,500 bond, worked for the past eight years at the Stout Street Clinic, which serves 15,000 homeless people annually, including people with substance-abuse problems and medical and mental-health issues. A drug-rehabilitation client went to staff several months ago and told them about Wright. "We had a choice. We could either have dealt with it internally and quietly and terminate him and let him move on and be someone else's problem or involve police," Parvensky said. They went to police in hopes that it would send a message and prevent Wright, who was fired, from moving on to another agency. The informant told police that Wright has been selling drugs to rehabilitation clients for 10 years. But Parvensky said he believes it has been a relatively recent activity. The coalition client had previously been a confidential informant who had helped police arrest four people on felony drug charges. The person agreed to buy crack from Wright under police surveillance, according to court records. Then a female police officer wearing a microphone and under video surveillance purchased $200 worth of crack from Wright at the clinic using marked $20 bills on Nov. 23. Wright, who lives in Aurora, faces a preliminary hearing in February. "The sad fact is that crack is easy to come by in downtown Denver," Parvensky said. "Although it was a despicable thing, I don't believe it was being sold openly or on a wide-scale basis." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt