Source: Irish Times (Ireland) Author: Nuala Haughey Contact: FAX: ++ 353 1 671 9407 Pubdate: Thursday, March 12, 1998 Editors Note: Martin has indicated that this newspaper has not responded to LTEs sent to the email address in the past, but you are welcome to try. NORTH'S 'HEROIN BLACKSPOT' FACES RISE IN DRUGS CRIME Ballymena is the North's heroin blackspot, and use of the drug has led to an increase in local crime, according to the RUC drugs squad. Eighty-five per cent of the £25,440 worth of heroin seized by the RUC in the North last year and most of the £6,200 worth of crack cocaine was in the Co Antrim town, said Det Sgt O.J. Hamilton. Ballymena is a prosperous and predominantly Protestant country town about 30 miles north of Belfast. The population of the district council area is 58,000, about a fifth of the size of greater Belfast. Heroin was brought to the town by a core of about 10 drug dealers who became addicted to it themselves after being introduced to the drug by dealers in England, said Sgt Hamilton. The situation has worsened over the past two years, with evidence of a trend towards injecting rather than smoking the drug. A three-year-old child from the town was admitted to Antrim Area Hospital last year suffering from heroin- and crack cocaine-induced seizures, a recent council meeting was told by a member of the local RUC crime team. It is believed the child, whose parents are addicts, may have picked up the drugs from the floor. The heroin problem, centred in some of the North's most deprived estates, is still "embryonic", said Sgt Hamilton. The RUC drug squad and crime team are targeting local dealers. The heroin on sale in Ballymena is brown and 30 per cent pure, according to Sgt Hamilton. It costs £35 for a third of a gram, but is frequently sold underweight, he said. Most is dealt from houses and on the streets of estates. "The people who are now starting to exhibit problems with it are those who have been on it a while. The ones we are noticing on it through drug crime tend to be from deprived housing estates. There has been a bit of a correlation between crime to fund the habit, but having said that, there is no raging crime wave," said Sgt Hamilton.