Source: Province, The (Vancouver, B.C.) Contact: http://www.vancouverprovince.com/newsite/news-c.html Pubdate: Fri, 11 Sep 1998 News A4 Author: Adrienne Tanner, Staff Reporter CHILD DEALER DOWNS COKE DURING RAID A 10-year-old Honduran boy who swallowed 28 rocks of cocaine during a Vancouver police sweep of Hastings Street is recovering in Children's Hospital. Police took the child to hospital after they saw him furiously swallowing the drugs during the raid, Staff-Sgt. Doug MacKay-Dunn said yesterday. The boy spit up eight of the rocks on the way to hospital. Twenty more were later pumped from his stomach. ``The kid could have died,'' said MacKay-Dunn. ``There's no way the officers could have prevented him from swallowing.'' Police are no longer allowed to use choke-holds to prevent dealers from swallowing evidence. Another 14-year-old Honduran youth also working as a ``runner'' at Hastings and Abbott streets was turned over to the ministry of children and families. He was placed in a group home where he is being counselled by a youth worker. Neither child has immediate family in Honduras. The youngest child's mother is known to Vancouver police and is believed to be dealing drugs in the United States. MacKay-Dunn said the investigating officers were ``disgusted'' to find such young children being used as mules by dealers. ``One made it known to the males present what he thought of people who would use a child as a repository for their illegal drugs.'' Police believe there are more than 100 Hondurans dealing crack cocaine along the Hastings strip and SkyTrain stops in Burnaby and New Westminster. They come to Canada overland and make refugee claims when they arrive. Among them are children who are lured north by the promise of jobs and then used as indentured dealers by older gang members. Immigration, police and provincial government officials have been scrambling for solutions since spring, when the influx of young Hondurans was first noted. The Children and Families Ministry can only offer help. Immigration Department spokesman Rob Johnston said his staff have been assigned to work with police and ministry social workers to ensure the Honduran children are protected. - --- Checked-by: Don Beck