Pubdate: Thursday, September 17, 1998 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Author: Salem Alaton MARKET FORCES CUT HEROIN PRICE Canadian police forces are unhappy to observe a buyer's market in the past five or six years for a particularly ugly consumer product: heroin. Not only has the street cost of the narcotic plummeted, but since 1992-93 the purity of the substance on offer has gone up considerably, says Detective Ed Roseto of the heroin section in the Toronto Police special investigations unit. While a gram of heroin might have sold for about $700 in Toronto a decade ago, it's now readily available for $200. And Det. Roseto adds: "We've had grams which we've bought [during undercover operations] for $100." Hard numbers for the heroin-addicted population in Canada don't exist, but Richard Garlick, spokesman for the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse in Ottawa, puts the figure at about 25,000 to 30,000, and says that the number has probably been fairly stable for the past 20 years. That suggests the current market reflects increased supply, with dealers not yet succeeding in widening demand. "Once people are addicted after three or four weeks, the theory goes that the traffickers can up the price, but that in fact doesn't seem to have happened," said Mr. Garlick. "The price has been fairly low and the purity has been very high for a number of years now." - --- Checked-by: Rolf Ernst