Pubdate: Sat, 29 Jan 2011 Source: Post and Courier, The (Charleston, SC) Copyright: 2011 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 Author: Schuyler Kropf NEW PROGRAM AIMED AT CURBING DRUG TRADE 8 opt for job help over prosecution: New program aimed at curbing drug trade Eight suspects caught up in the North Charleston drug trade have signed up for a second-chance program in which they will be steered toward job training in lieu of being prosecuted. As long as they stay clean, the drug charges they potentially face won't be pursued, a key provision of an experimental reform program launched this month. The men, all between ages 18 and 30, were snared as part of a six-month undercover investigation of the crack cocaine trade around the drug-plagued Charleston Farms neighborhood. The group members were considered lower-tier players in the street corner drug trade with minimal criminal records, as opposed to the approximately two dozen other more hardened dealers who were arrested on federal and state charges of distributing cocaine base. North Charleston Police Sgt. Brian Adams said the eight voluntarily agreed to take part in the pilot program. They will be required to meet with a mentor from two local church groups and pursue job training that includes such fields as construction or installing insulation. At present, the eight have "little or no criminal history at all," Adams said. Failing to complete the requirements or getting back in the drug trade means the charges hanging against them will be pursued. Those are now on hold. Another of the requirements is that they also come back to the community for in-person updates, detailing their progress in moving away from the drug trade. Because the eight have not been formally charged, their identities were not released by authorities. Federal, state and local law enforcement officials announced the initiative Jan. 20. The U.S. Attorney's Office is calling its end of the program "Drug Market Intervention," while North Charleston has adopted the moniker "Stop and Take A New Direction," or STAND. In August, U.S. Attorney Bill Nettles approached North Charleston Police Chief Jon Zumalt about bringing the program here from a similar program in North Carolina. They chose Charleston Farms -- mostly south of Remount Road near Interstate 26 -- because, they said, it is a distressed area but one with a solid base of home ownership and community involvement. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt