Pubdate: Tue, 19 Oct 1999 Source: Vancouver Province (Canada) Copyright: The Province, Vancouver 1999 Contact: http://www.vancouverprovince.com/ Author: Steve Berry, Staff Reporter The Province POLICE TEAM UP TO BUY DRUGS Walking down Abbott Street toward Hastings, the scruffy-looking man is at home among the jiving drug dealers festooning the store fronts. Comfortable on his way to work, chatting about his kids and wife with a reporter uncomfortable in the area, he's looking to buy drugs. Anything at all. Up, down, rock, powder -- just be careful. And careful he is. He's under the watchful eye of his shambling buddy, trailing behind, or maybe to the side, or in front. He never looks for him, but knows his guardian is there. They are Vancouver police officers, part of the drug enforcement and education team, here tonight simply to show how easy it is to buy drugs. As we walk the short block before turning on to Hastings we hear the dealer's whispers. The buy takes only seconds as the nest of Hispanic men vibrate like bees in a hive. The action is slowed only when another dealer jumps in to try and make the deal. Ten bucks, and a small off-white crystal of rock cocaine the size of a quarter of an Aspirin is produced. As we wander off along Hastings, more offers of drugs come from any number of men casually standing or walking the street. Later, a tour of Commercial Drive shows dealers haunting the streets there, too. This team usually works outside of the Hastings strip, busting dial-a-dopers, coke houses and street-level dealers in areas that become hot potatoes because of pressure from residents or politicians. And they're just back from a three-week stint with "Project Libra" in which they made dozens of buys and identifications. Although they number 12 on paper, they operate with seven or eight and have had almost 280 arrests since last January. They are philosophical when asked about the revolving-door nature of their arrests: They know they can arrest a man early in the evening and, before their shift is over, arrest him again, after he's let out of jail. "It's job security, man," is the mantra. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea