Source: Daily Record, The (NJ) Contact: http://www.dailyrecord.com/ Copyright: 1998 Gannett Satellite Information Network Inc. Pubdate: 2 Oct 1998 Author: Will Morton Daily Record Note: Item number 26 of 26 in the series "Heroin: A Clear and Present Danger" U.S., STATE STRATEGIES FOR THE DRUG FIGHT Trying to stop the tide of heroin, federal legislators have proposed special drug courts across the nation and state officials plan to crack down on the way drug dealers launder money. The federal Drug Elimination and Justice Act would spend $15 million to set up special drug courts in 10 cities across the nation. Proposed by Sen. Robert Torricelli, D-N.J., and Rep. Robert Menendez, D-Union City, it awaits introduction in Congress. It would: * Create courts similar to those in Camden, Essex, Hudson and Passaic counties where only drug cases would be heard. It would coordinate judges, prosecutors, defenders, treatment specialists, probation officers, educational experts and community leaders to integrate treatment into the judicial system. * Expand President Clinton's Community Oriented Policing Services program with $1.5 billion to add 20,000 police officers and safety officers in schools. * Increase the minimum penalty for anyone convicted of dealing drugs near a school from one to three years for the first offense and three to five for the second. * Offer $1 billion in federal grants to nonprofit organizations to establish safe havens where children could go after school. An FBI report says that's when 18 percent of all juvenile crime is committed. * Increase funding for prosecuting drug offenders. Torricelli and Menendez said their bill would save money because offenders would get more treatment and spend less time in jail. In New Jersey, Attorney General Peter Verniero last week unveiled a proposal to stem the flow of drug money through New Jersey. It included: * Creation of a financial investigation unit within the Division of Criminal Justice. * Criminals convicted of money laundering and drug offenses would have those sentences run consecutively. * A $2,500 cap would be set on the size of checks that can be submitted at check-cashing outlets. There's no limit now. * Wiretapping would be allowed in money-laundering investigations. * Gamblers would only be allowed to purchase $3,000 of chips at casinos at a time. No limit exists now. * Access to federal information such as suspicious activity reports would be improved. * Hidden compartments in vehicles, where money or drugs could be hidden, would be illegal. Verniero also wants to increase the penalty for possession of small amounts of heroin, turning possession of one ounce into a first-degree crime and one-quarter ounce into a second-degree crime. Possession of five ounces or more is now a first degree-crime and one-half ounce or more is a second degree crime, the same as for cocaine. Verniero says the lower amounts for heroin are justified because the drug sells in smaller amounts than cocaine. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski