Pubdate: 23 March 1999 Source: Examiner, The (Ireland) Copyright: Examiner Publications Ltd, 1999 Contact: http://www.examiner.ie/ Author: Liam Heylin SUPERMARKET FOR DRUGS PUT OUT OF BUSINESS A DRUGS supermarket operating out of a local authority house secured by barbed wire fencing, closed circuit cameras and two Rottweiler dogs was put out of business when an order was secured for the eviction of the tenants yesterday. Head of the drugs squad in Cork, Detective Inspector Tony Quilter, described 190 Rathpeacon Road, Farranree, Cork, as a virtual supermarket for drugs, including cannabis, ecstasy and LSD. The house is owned by Cork Corporation and was rented to John and Helen Heaphy in 1991. John Heaphy surrendered his interest in the house in September 1996 but gardai believed, on the basis of regular searches of the property, that he continued to live there with his wife and seven children. "The premises is a Corporation house, end of terrace. They (the Heaphys) have barbed wire around the perimeter of the premises. They have cameras installed facing the front entrance. "This closed circuit television monitors anyone coming in from the gate to the front door. "At the rear of the premises they have procured two Rottweiller dogs which are housed there," Det. Insp. Quilter said yesterday. Sergeant Barry McPoland, of Watercourse Road Garda Station, in the city, said he had met with residents a number of times and they expressed fears of the Heaphy family and their cohorts. Garda William Dawes and Garda Oliver O'Sullivan of Mayfield Drugs Unit were involved in a number of searches of the house. "Mrs Heaphy admitted to me she was aware of drug dealing going on in the house," Garda Dawes said. Garda O'Sullivan said that on garda patrols in the area almost every time he turned the corner from Pophams Road to Rathpeacon Road a number of people in the front garden of the Heaphy's house would run into the house on seeing the gardai. Corporation solicitor, Brian Harrington, brought an application to Cork District Court to take possession of the house. Judge Murrogh Connellan said after hearing the evidence: "In view of the nature of the evidence I am giving a warrant to the Corporation for immediate re-possession of the house". Mr Harrington said that where such an order was granted because of the anti-social behaviour of the tenant there was no provision for a stay to be put on the order. Defence solicitor, Frank Buttimer, had argued that the Corporation had failed to make a case against Mrs Heaphy and that her level of illegal activity was non-existent. Judge Connellan said: "The tenant or occupiers of a house are responsible for the goings-on in the house and the use the house is being put to. "This house is like no other I have ever heard of." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D