Pubdate: Tue, 19 Oct 1999 Source: Roanoke Times (VA) Copyright: 1999 Roanoke Times Contact: 201 W. Campbell Ave., Roanoke, Va. 24010 Website: http://www.roanoke.com/roatimes/index.html Author: Paul Dellinger, The Roanoke Times, These Are Higher-Level Drug Dealers, Not Penny-Ante Street Thugs, Sheriffs Say WYTHE COUNTY DRUG SWEEP TARGETS 30 SUSPECTS Although this is the largest drug sweep in Wythe County, a majority of those indicted are from Pulaski County. WYTHEVILLE -- Law enforcement authorities in Wythe and Pulaski counties began arresting 30 people Tuesday on drug indictments following a five-month undercover investigation in both localities. A Wythe County grand jury heard hours of testimony and worked into the night Monday before issuing 63 indictments including possession of and intent to sell cocaine and marijuana and controlled drugs such as the pain-killer Oxycotin. Wythe County Sheriff Kermit Osborne said he thinks this is the biggest sweep of cocaine dealers in the history of Wythe County. Twenty-two men and eight women were indicted, some on multiple charges. "This is an outstanding example of what can be accomplished when law enforcement officials cooperate by attacking a multi-jurisdictional problem with a multi-jurisdictional response," Osborne said. "These are significant arrests of higher-level drug dealers, not some penny-ante group of street thugs." "These are not street-level dealers," agreed Pulaski County Sheriff Jim Davis. He said authorities in Pulaski County held off on potential arrests there to give the joint crackdown time to work. The Wythe County and Pulaski County Sheriffs' Offices, Pulaski Police Department, state police and federal Drug Enforcement Administration provided manpower, data and equipment in the investigation. "We anticipate more arrests coming out of this, state as well as federal," said Austin Hall, special agent with the state police Bureau of Criminal Investigation. The list of indictments gave only names and not addresses, but Osborne said a majority of those indicted are from Pulaski County. Most of the distribution was coming out of Pulaski County, he said, even though all the activities leading to the charges took place in Wythe. "Drug crime is not a crime that knows about county lines. ... What this has done is taken some of our major drug dealers off the street in Pulaski," said Pulaski Police Chief Herb Cooley. "I think crack cocaine is starting to make headway in Southwest Virginia ... and this sort of joint operation is what we're going to have to continue to do to stem this sort of thing." Osborne said the joint investigation started after resident complaints and informants showed that larger quantities of crack cocaine were coming into this area. He said drug abuses are a direct cause of other crimes, as users get hooked and then rob or steal to get money to support their habit. He said Wythe County has had three armed robberies in the past year after several years without any, and at least two of those were directly related to drugs. Davis estimated that half the robberies that happen in Pulaski County have their basis in drug use. Cooley said Oxycotin, which comes in pain pills that users cut up and snort or melt for direct injection, is becoming the drug of choice by abusers. "We've seen an increase in thefts and most related back to Oxycotin," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D