Pubdate: Sun, 24 Aug 2014 Source: Portsmouth Herald (NH) Copyright: 2014 Seacoast Newspapers Contact: http://www.seacoastonline.com/news/index.htm Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1157 Author: Elizabeth Dinan A 20/20 VIEW OF CITY'S WAR ON OPIATE ABUSE ABC News Show Filmed Portsmouth Police Officers' Battle Against Illicit Drugs The Portsmouth Police Department's war on drugs will be televised. As part of a program about opiate abuse across the country, the ABC News show "20/20" filmed Portsmouth police officers while they went undercover to buy drugs, watched drug deals from afar and made drug busts. Producer Glenn Ruppell said Portsmouth was selected as one of the featured communities for the "20/20" show "because it's exactly the kind of place - a beautiful, safe and prosperous town and popular vacation destination - that too many people think is unlikely to have a drug problem." "Yet after several days riding along with the Portsmouth police," he said, "we were able to see that this is an issue to be very concerned about just about anywhere." Deputy Police Chief Corey MacDonald said the 20/20 crew was in Portsmouth for two weeks at the end of July. He said Portsmouth will be one of a group of communities featured during the show "about the surge of opiate abuse across the country." Each geographical location will tell a different part of the overall story, with the Portsmouth segment showing law enforcement efforts, he said. "We don't have open-air drug markets like some big cities," MacDonald said. "You have to know who to talk to and what you're looking for. We're extremely safe, but there's a strong opiate trade underneath." The film crew followed members of a new nine-person plain-clothes drug team that was announced last month when MacDonald said a lot of Portsmouth crime is linked to drug abuse and that many heroin users first abused prescription pain pills. The deputy chief said the television crew filmed "drug pickups and transfers" and had cameras rolling while a local man was "making a sale in Market Square in broad daylight." "Then we moved in and made arrests," he said. Some of the undercover officers' faces will be blurred to protect their undercover status, as will the faces of civilians who did not give consent to be filmed. People who watch the show will recognize local landmarks as the program follows local officers, MacDonald said. That includes the Wamesit Place public housing neighborhood, where two residents were filmed while they were arrested on July 19 for heroin charges, MacDonald said. Unannounced and at night, police knocked on a door before finding Kassandra Young, 28, of 179B Greenleaf Ave., and Tyler Lunday, 28, address unknown, with heroin and needles, MacDonald said. Young agreed to let the 20/20 camera crew inside, where police found evidence that heroin use had been "going on all day" and a "spoon loaded up and ready to go," MacDonald said. Their arrests are expected to make the final cut for the nationally-broadcast, prime-time television show, said the deputy chief. MacDonald said the television news team "shot a ton of video," but he's been told the Portsmouth segment will likely be about 15 minutes long. "We have no access to their footage, no editorial rights," he said. "They recently did work with the New York Police Department, so we rely on their stellar reputation." He said he was filmed giving briefings, before going out and doing drug investigations and busts with his officers. Other officers filmed included Steve Blanding, Bill Dobois, Mark Newport and Duane Jaques, he said. "People will be kind of surprised," said the deputy police chief. "They'll wonder why '20/20' is in Portsmouth, where there's a low crime rate? The answer is that this isn't a Lawrence, or a Detroit, where if you told people there was an opiate problem, they'd say, 'No kidding.'" What television viewers won't see, he said, is the Portsmouth Police Department's new "multi-pronged approach" to drug abuse because the producers were in Portsmouth just to capture enforcement efforts. "My frustration is you won't see the creative push we're doing," MacDonald said. "Here, they wanted enforcement. You'll just see the traditional piece. Only one slice of the pie." Not filmed was the police department's first "Community Access to Recovery Day" last month that paired addicts and people who care about them with service providers at Portsmouth Regional Hospital. MacDonald said the program will be repeated in September. "It was an interesting experience," MacDonald said of the "20/20" filming. He said he hopes the show serves as a deterrent and to "expose the problem of drug abuse" in Portsmouth. "Residents will hopefully be happy to see our level of enforcement," he said. The show is not yet scheduled, but Ruppell said it will air sometime this fall. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D