Source: Scotsman (UK) Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Pubdate: 8 Oct 1998 Author: Jenny Booth Home Affairs Correspondent POLICE CHIEFS PLAN BIGGEST BLITZ YET ON DRUG DEALERS McLeish heralds crackdown backed by initiatives aimed at reforming addicts SCOTLAND'S eight chief constables are preparing to launch the biggest crackdown on drug dealers in the country's history. Police will work hand in hand this winter with customs officers, benefits agency workers and The Inland Revenue, targeting not just the criminals but also their assets, tax dodges and benefit frauds. Henry McLeish, the Scottish home affairs minister, announced the campaign yesterday at a press conference in Gorbals, Glasgow. At the same event Sam Galbraith, the Scottish health minister, announced an extra UKP5 million for health workers and social services to fund initiatives aimed at reforming drug users. The money includes: cash for the Health Education Board Scotland (HEBS) to mount a campaign to warn young people of the dangers of heroin; an extra UKP2 million to health boards to spend on drugs treatments such as prescribing methadone as a substitute for heroin; and UKP2 million to fund court sentences such as new drug treatment and testing orders. "Spending on drugs treatment and community sentencing is also spending on prevention of repeat offending by drug addicts," said Mr Galbraith. "It helps to cut street crime and return drug users to a law abiding life. Substitute prescribing has cut back sharply on crimes committed by heroin injectors in Glasgow, and produced savings of half a billion pounds." The anti-drugs campaign has been prompted by the rising numbers of offenders reported for drugs possession, supply or importation. In 1988, Scottish police recorded 5,213 drugs crimes - by 1997 that had risen 600 per cent to 29,386. Mr McLeish said the effects on communities have been devastating, with drug users responsible for half of all the crime committed in Scotland and causing their families and neighbours untold misery. "Strathclyde Police launched a major drive on Tuesday to attack housebreaking linked to drug abuse. Other forces are preparing their own campaigns and plans are being drawn up for a Scotland-wide blitz, involving the police, local authorities, housing departments and others to reclaim communities gripped by dealers." He added that housing authorities would soon be able to use new powers of eviction to throw drug dealers out of their homes, freeing neighbourhoods from their reign of terror. He also announced UKP50,000 to research the connection between drugs and all types of crime. The study will be carried out in Strathclyde and Fife Mr McLeish confirmed that he was considering changing the law to enable the Crown to pursue drugs barons through the civil courts, taking advantage of the lower standard of proof - "in the balance of probabilities" as opposed to "beyond all reasonable doubt" in the criminal courts - to confiscate fortunes made through the drugs trade. "We must target drugs suppliers where it hurts most, in the wealth they have acquired," Mr McLeish said. He acknowledged the fears of civil liberties campaigners but said that it was a question of balancing the rights of drug dealers with the rights of communities like Cranhill and the Gorbals, devastated by drugs. He promised to launch a further initiative within weeks, using electronic surveillance to cut the amount of drugs in prisons. Meanwhile, Scotland's two drug prevention teams, based in Glasgow and Dundee, are to be merged into one national team with UKP700,000 funding. David Campbell, the chairman of HEBS, which has been tasked with cutting the number of young people attracted to heroin, said that he was keen to avoid the mistakes of past media campaigns which had tended to glamorise the drug. The campaign will probably reflect the fact that different areas have different heroin problems, with young clubbers in Grampian smoking heroin on a Monday morning to help them come down from their weekend ecstasy high, whereas young people in Glasgow smoke or inject it as a drug of first choice. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski