Pubdate: Thur, 18 November 1999 Source: Union Leader (NH) Copyright: The Union Leader Corp. 1999 Contact: P.O. Box 9555 Manchester, NH 03108-9555 Website: http://www.theunionleader.com/ Author: Pat Grossmith, Union Leader Staff POLICE DEFEND TOYS 'R US DRUG BUST STATE POLICE acknowledged yesterday that the public could have been in danger when an undercover police officer met with alleged drug dealers in a Manchester toy store parking lot Tuesday afternoon. However, police point out that undercover drug investigations are inherently dangerous and that they had taken steps to ensure as much as possible the safety of both the public and officers. As a result of the seven-month undercover investigation four men, described by state police narcotics detective Bruce Twyon as "dangerous criminals," are in the Valley Street Jail on $500,000 to $750,000 cash bail. The men -- Woodley Dutervil, 25, of 80 Dunbarton Road, No. 5, Manchester; Latorre Johnson, 25, of 251 Putnam St., Manchester; James Johnson, 26, 57 Oceanview Drive, Dorchester, Mass., and Jeffrey Thomas, 33, of 299 Norfolk St., Boston -- were arraigned on the felony charges yesterday morning in Manchester District Court. None of the defendants was allowed to enter pleas in district court yesterday since the charges are all felonies. Probable cause hearings were set for Dec. 2, at which time they can argue for lower bail. They were charged with various crimes including receiving stolen property, conspiracy to sell a narcotic drug, possessing a controlled drug and felony possession of a firearm in connection with the drug bust Tuesday at 6 p.m. in the Toys 'R Us parking lot on Kaye Street. There, State Police Sgt. Mike Hambrook of the Narcotics Investigations Unit said, the defendants tried to lure State Trooper John Encarnacao out behind the toy store. The defendants' plan, according to Twyon, was to rob Encarnacao of the $22,500 in cash. Hambrook acknowledged that customers, including children, heading into the toy store could have been placed in danger by the undercover operation. He said, however, that drug deals are happening everywhere, whether an undercover investigation or not. "If you go Christmas shopping this year, there can be a dozen drug sales going down in the parking lot without police involvement," he said. State police, he said, are trying to infiltrate drug dealing operations through undercover investigations, an inherently dangerous job. In undercover probes, he said, police operate under the drug dealers' rules and not the standard operating procedures of state police. At the same time, however, he said police try to control the situation -- with other officers nearby to be called in, if necessary -- and make it as safe as possible for both the public and the undercover officers. Twyon said that while police had other officers in place to ensure Encarnacao's and the public's safety, two of the four men arrested were conducting their own counter-surveillance prior to the alleged sale. They had cellular telephones, he explained, and were walking around the parking lot peering in cars and checking out the entire area. According to police, Encarnacao allegedly negotiated a price of $22,500 for a kilo of cocaine with Dutervil, who police said sold 20BD ounces of cocaine and two ounces of crack cocaine to the undercover officer over the past several months. Twyon said, however, that Dutervil apparently went to another alleged drug supplier -- Latorre Johnson -- for the kilo which later tested negative for cocaine. Twyon said the substance could be anything, flour or baking powder, for instance, but that won't be determined until it is analyzed by the state police laboratory, a process that could take two weeks or more. Hambrook said that the defendants had tried to have the drug deal go down on Monday night. Encarnacao and the defendants met that night, he said, near Manchester West High School. The defendants wanted Encarnacao to go inside a nearby residence for the alleged drug exchange. Encarnacao, he said, refused and a new date and time was chosen by the defendants: the parking lot at Toys 'R Us. Originally, each of the four men was held on $250,000 cash set by a bail commissioner Tuesday night. However, Judge William Lyons, after listening to information provided by Jane Young, an assistant state attorney general, raised it to $250,000 per charge for each defendant. Should any of the men be able to raise the bail money, they must return to court for a hearing to determine whether the source of the cash is the result of drug-dealing. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart