Source: Standard-Times (MA) Contact: http://www.s-t.com/ Copyright: 1999 The Standard-Times Pubdate: 11 Jan 1999 Author: Polly Saltonstall, Standard-Times staff writer FEDERAL DRUG FIGHTERS TO OPEN OFFICE IN CITY NEW BEDFORD -- The federal Drug Enforcement Agency hopes to open a permanent office in the city within six months to combat what agents describe as a serious trafficking problem in the area. Special Agent Pamela Mersky said last week the agency is looking for office space in the city. The agency, which has been covering the New Bedford area from its Cape Cod office in Barnstable, plans to station two agents in the new office, she said. "It's a community we have paid attention to in the past several years," she said of New Bedford, "especially with the heroin problems and a pipeline going right through New Bedford from Providence and New York." She cited an influx of cheap, fairly pure heroin as the area's biggest problem. The most common form of transportation appears to be hidden compartments in cars, she added, not boats, as in years past. Nationally, drug agents are seizing heroin with a purity level of around 40 percent, but purity levels in Massachusetts and the rest of New England hover at 60 percent and higher, she said, noting that heroin seized in Massachusetts has tested as high as 90 percent pure. And the street price has dropped from as much as $20 for a small, postage-stamp-size bag a decade ago to as low as $5. "Because of the higher, purer levels, it's being administered in a number of different ways," she said. "More people are snorting it now and getting a good high. That makes it more socially acceptable. It's not like these users are your typical junkie with a needle." Local law enforcement authorities say the average age of heroin users has dropped. Many of the people arrested for dealing heroin in recent years are in their late teens and early 20s, said Bristol County District Attorney Paul F. Walsh Jr. The nature of the drug trade also has changed in recent years from big dealers controlling a large segment of the market to smaller independent operators who sell their product using cell phones and beepers, he said. The shift has meant dealers no longer operate from one apartment or house and are less visible on the streets, said New Bedford Police Lt. Melvin Wotton, who heads the city's narcotics squad. The lower visibility has resulted in safer streets, but has made it harder for police to nab dealers, he said. Out of 1,150 arrests last year in New Bedford, close to 95 percent were drug-related, Lt. Wotton said. Of those, more involved larger quantities of drugs than in the past, he noted. "We've seized more drugs than ever before last year," he said, adding that cocaine and marijuana also are a problem in the city. Still, noting that the city's crime rate has dropped, Lt. Wotton said he thinks the area's drug problem is not as bad as it once was. Federal agents shared an office with the state police in Mr. Walsh's office from 1996 until about a year ago, he said. Neither he nor state police Lt. Patrick Fitzgerald, supervisor of the state police detectives assigned to the district attorney's office, could explain why the agent moved out of the office. "We kept on getting an agent on temporary assignment, then next thing we knew he was gone," Mr. Walsh said. "We'd welcome their presence back again." But even though the federal agency moved its employee out of the local office, Lt. Fitzgerald said, the group still worked cases with the federal agency. "They have not been gone from the scene," he said. "They are just not physically here in this office." The federal agency also has offices in Boston, Lowell, Springfield, Worcester and at Logan Airport. - --- MAP posted-by: Mike Gogulski