Pubdate: Sat, 28 Jan 2012 Source: Burlington Free Press (VT) Copyright: 2012 Burlington Free Press Contact: http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/632 Author: Sam Hemingway VERMONT SENATE PANEL HEARS TESTIMONY ON DRUG TRADE, GANG ACTIVITY MONTPELIER -- Evidence of gang activity is on the rise in Vermont, spurred by an active illicit drug market and the ease of obtaining guns in the state, the commander of the Vermont Narcotics Investigation Unit told a Senate panel Thursday. Also at the hearing, a state Health Department official expressed support for the concept of allowing state police drug investigators access to Vermont's prescription drug monitoring database. "There's no question that we have gang members from large metropolitan areas coming to Vermont specifically to profit from the drug trade," Vermont State Police Capt. Glenn Hall said at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing. Hall said drug traffickers sometimes trade drugs for guns, because guns are harder to obtain in other states than Vermont and bring a higher value when resold back in states such as Massachusetts and New York. Dominic D'Amato, manager of facility operations for the state Corrections Department, said guards at the state's seven jails have gathered evidence that suggested inmates with ties to out-of-state gangs such as the Bloods, Latin Kings and Aryan Nation, among others, have been incarcerated in Vermont. "There's a saying they have that goes like 'Come to Vermont on vacation. Leave it on probation,'" D'Amato said. He said some of the groups with names such as the Chittenden County White Boys and the Franklin County White Boys are homegrown groups that are trying to emulate the out-of-state gangs. The testimony about gang activity was sought by the committee's chairman, Sen. Dick Sears, D-Bennington, who said graffiti and other signs of a gang presence have turned up in his hometown recently. Sears said he wants to see Hall's unit, formerly known as the Vermont Drug Task Force, play the role of statewide gang task force. "The idea is to have them focus more on gang activity," Sears said following Thursday's hearing. "I'm hoping we are able to get more federal dollars for this purpose, and add some troopers to the task force or create a separate unit." Opiate monitoring The Senate panel also heard testimony from Deputy Health Commissioner Barbara Cimaglio and state Medical Practice Board Director David Herlihy about the state's ongoing prescription opiate problem. Cimaglio said the department supported plans to have doctors undergo special training to better handle pain management patients and better identify signs of prescription opiate addiction. She also said the department wants all doctors to check with the department's Prescription Drug Monitoring System before issuing prescriptions and is prepared to provide three Vermont State Police drug investigators access to the database when necessary, something prohibited by the law that set up the database in 2006. "The concept is one we support," she said. "We understand that because of the great deal of diversion that it is important to look at this, and we are experiencing conditions that we weren't experiencing when we first started the Vermont Prescription Drug System." Herlihy told the panel the Medical Practice Board has put in place a policy requiring doctors to be more vigilant with patients receiving pain medications, and he cited a case that underlined why the policy is needed, both for the patient and the doctor. "I had a report that showed that one doctor's patients filled at one pharmacy in about a seven-or eight-month period (involved) several hundred thousand dollars of narcotics," Herlihy said. He said there was "nothing public in the case yet" because it remains under investigation. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom