Pubdate: Tue, 06 Jul 1999 Source: New York Daily News (NY) Copyright: 1999 Daily News, L.P. Contact: http://www.nydailynews.com/ Forum: http://townhall.mostnewyork.com/mb/index.html Author: Sgt. Fred J. Santoro Note: Santoro is now assigned to New York City's Organized Crime Investigative Division. Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n677.a14.html KEEP UP THE WAR ON DRUG DEALERS John R. Dunne proclaimed on this page last week that as an author of New York State's Rockefeller Drug Laws, no one knows better than him that these laws need to be overhauled. Teddy Roosevelt once said, "A critic is a man who walks onto the battlefield a day later, shooting the wounded." Dunne is such a man. You see, I know that our laws work, because I helped to fight the war on drugs for nine years -- along with many other good policemen and women -- when I was in the New York City Police Department's narcotics division. I was assigned to the Brooklyn South Narcotics major case unit, and my colleagues and I built many cases on the nonviolent,drug-addicted offenders who are, as Dunne put it, filling our prisons to dangerously crowded levels and are denied sufficient drug treatment. Instead of worrying about these so-called nonviolent drug dealers who prey on innocent people or about taking the handcuffs off bleeding-heart judges who already set many criminals free to pillage and murder another day, why not take the cuffs off law enforcement? How about lobbying to build more jails, rather than advocating the release of drug dealers who are polluting our streets and, ultimately, poisoning our children? Dunne said that there are people in jail for selling as little as 2 ounces of cocaine or possessing as little as 4 ounces. Well, broken down on the street, 4 ounces of cocaine is enough to get an entire junior high school high. There are 28 grams in an ounce of cocaine. When 28 grams is broken down into $20 bags, it can destroy a lot of lives. There won't be need for any treatment if we get rid of the scum supplying drugs and affording people the opportunity to get addicted to them. As for nonviolent drug offenders, drugs are the catalyst for many crimes. A junkie will go out and steal something to get his product. That same junkie gets wired on drugs, and he or she is willing to go out and stick a gun in someone's face to rob that person. Below are just some officers from the New York City and New York State police departments who have given their lives fighting in this war: Sgt. John McCormick of the Bronx Narcotics District was killed April 27, 1998, while executing a search warrant in an upper Manhattan apartment. He was 43 and the father of one child. Officer Sean Carrington, who was in the Bronx Narcotics District Central 46 Precinct Initiative, was shot and killed while working undercover Jan. 19, 1998. He was 28 and the father of one child. Detective Louis Lopez, an investigator in the Manhattan South Narcotics District, was killed March 10, 1993, during a gunfight that erupted while he was undercover in lower Manhattan. Lopez was 35 and the father of two children. Joseph Aversa, a New York State trooper assigned as an investigator with the Drug Enforcement Task Force, was killed March 5, 1990, when he and his partners were ambushed by suspected drug dealers during a buy operation. Aversa was 31. Officer Christopher Hoban, an undercover officer with the Manhattan North Narcotics District, was killed Oct. 18, 1988, when a struggle broke out between police officers and suspected drug dealers. Hoban was 26 years old. These fallen heroes represented the police force with pride and integrity. Who's going to their homes to fill the void when the kids they've left behind open gifts on Christmas day? Who's going to take my kids to hockey practice, or tell my little girl how much she's loved if, God forbid, something happens to me? While Dunne lays his head on his pillow at night in a nice, safe environment, there are men and women fighting -- and falling -- to protect and serve while the battle is going on, not a day later. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake