Source: New York Times (NY) Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Pubdate: Sat, 22 Aug 1998 Author: KIT R. ROANE ICE CREAM TRUCK ALSO DID DRUG BUSINESS, POLICE SAY NEW YORK CITY - Despite its merry tunes and brightly colored exterior, the ice cream truck that plied the streets of Bensonhurst was not your typical dispenser of summertime treats for the boys and girls of Brooklyn. For one thing, the truck was known to chase after children on bikes, according to a neighborhood resident. For another, there were often three or four teen-agers inside, more than was needed to dole out ice cream cones and Popsicles. All this may have made the truck just another neighborhood oddity, were it not for the other things it sold: bags of hashish and marijuana along with the Batman bars and Rocket pops, according to investigators. And on Thursday, the police said they had arrested seven people on charges of either buying or selling drugs from the ice cream truck. "It was full service: ice cream, bonbons and weed," said Sergeant Richard W. Miller of the 62d Precinct, who led a sting operation that finally put the truck out of business. "This certainly isn't the usual in Bensonhurst," he added, "at least not out of an ice cream truck." The police said they got wind of the drug truck when undercover officers tried to make a purchase from some dealers at Satellite Park two weeks ago. The dealers said they were out of stock, and suggested that the buyers instead wait for "the good humor man." When the truck failed to show, the police went searching, finally catching up with it at Seth Low Park around 6:15 P.M. on Thursday. Among the seven people arrested were the truck's driver, Alexey Zagrebin, 20, and his helper, James LaPointe, 19. The five others happened to be in line to buy drugs at the truck with the undercover officers. Two 17-year-old boys in front of the officers bought two $10 bags of hash, then resold them to three 15-year-old boys waiting on the curb. "I don't know if it was an age requirement or what," Sergeant Miller said, chuckling. "They just wouldn't sell to the 15-year-olds. But when our officers got up, they had no problem selling to them." The police said that Zagrebin, LaPointe and the two 17-year-old boys have been charged with criminal sale of a controlled substance, which carries a prison term or juvenile-detention term of no more than six years. They said the three 15-year-old buyers were charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance, which carries a term in juvenile detention of not more than one year. The police seized six $10 bags of marijuana and 12 similar bags of hash from the truck at the time of the raid. Zagrebin told the police that his mother had bought the truck for him in hopes that he would get a job. According to the police, Zagrebin and LaPointe traveled a daily route around the neighborhood schools and three local parks just in time for children to be getting out of class. And for four months, they were making good money at their illegal trade, Sergeant Miller added, noting that Zagrebin "claimed to be making only $200 a day on ice cream, while getting $300 a day for drugs." Residents around Seth Low Park agreed that the ice cream men had a following, though few had suspected the full extent of the offerings. Mark de Marco, a 27-year-old landscaper, said he often saw the truck around the park when he played basketball with friends. He said one of the men in the truck was rude, barking at those standing in line requesting ice cream. Angel Caro, 30, said that one day he was helping his 4-year-old son, Eduardo, along the park's edge, when the truck began speeding toward some children riding bicycles nearby. "I was coming out with him, and one guy in the truck started to accelerate very quickly, to chase a couple of kids," he said. When he went to chastise the driver, the man said he was just "trying to knock them over." - --- Checked-by: Rich O'Grady