Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - US WV: Southern Regional Drug and Violent Crimes Task Force
Title:US WV: Southern Regional Drug and Violent Crimes Task Force
Published On:2008-05-23
Source:Bluefield Daily Telegraph (WV)
Fetched On:2008-05-24 22:00:04
SOUTHERN REGIONAL DRUG AND VIOLENT CRIMES TASK FORCE:
FUNDING LOSS MAY PUSH DRUGS

PRINCETON - When members of two Princeton neighborhoods became
convinced this spring that drug dealers were living and working next
door, they called the Southern Regional Drug and Violent Crimes Task Force.

For weeks, officers with the undercover unit and other Mercer County
law enforcement agencies kept their eyes on the Old Beckley Road and
Lower Bell Street houses in question, stopping motorists as they left
and tracing potential drug-trafficking patterns. In early April, they
arrested two suspects accused of a variety of drug and weapons charges.

At the time, task force Coordinator Sgt. J. Centeno said his officers
had answered the community calls for help.

Now, he's asking for assistance from the citizens he hopes to
continue serving and the lawmakers who charge him with protecting
local streets. Without that help, there may not be anyone there to
take similar calls in the future.

The Southern Regional Drug and Violent Crimes Task Force is a
multi-agency partnership forged with local law enforcement officers
and federal funds and tasked with tracking and removing drug activity
in Mercer, McDowell and Wyoming counties. Armed with six officers,
including Centeno, in-depth drug training and sophisticated
surveillance equipment, the task force works an average of 300
drug-related cases per year.

Centeno isn't sure his elite law enforcement team will be able to
continue that trend if he loses 67 percent of the federal funds
previously allotted to the task force, and time is running out for
lawmakers to rewrite the current budget bill.

The 2007 omnibus appropriations bill slated to take effect July 1
would reduce funding for grants that support multidisciplinary,
collaborative task forces from $520 million to roughly $170 million.

Losing more than two-thirds of his federal funding will eventually
force the public to pay for the task force's services, put an undue
burden on the parent agencies that provide its investigators or take
its officers off the beats they've worked years to get inside.

"Many of the cases we work start with calls or complaints from the
public," Centeno said. "If Congress continues these cuts and we don't
get any funds, pretty soon, there won't be anybody on the other end
of the line, other than a uniformed officer, who is already doing all he can."
If that happens, Centeno predicted an increase in the drug dealers
free in southern West Virginia and a surge in the products they push.
He estimates there are, or have been 150-200 people in custody on
drug charges his officers pursued. Without those officers, he said
similar people will never answer to their crimes in court.

"These are going to be drug dealers that will be on the streets if
funding doesn't come through," he said.

Making the task force

Much of the federal funding to fight drugs is designated through the
High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) program that identifies
the areas of the United States that are particularly at risk for harm
due to drugs and their trade. The program was formed in the Anti-Drug
Abuse Act of 1988 and reauthorized in 1998, according to
www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov.
The director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy has the
duty of designating HIDTA territories, with input from the U.S.
attorney general, secretary of treasury, secretary of homeland
security and heads of the national drug control program agencies, as
well as the governors of states involved.

The Appalachia HIDTA was added to the federal initiative in 1998. It
included the states of West Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee and was
at first designed to target the cultivation and sale of marijuana.
Since that time, prescription painkillers, cocaine and even
methamphetamine have become drug problems in the region.

Although the Mountain State is part of HIDTA, specific counties must
also be identified. The more counties and the more area included in
the HIDTA, the more federal funding allocated.
While Centeno said Kentucky and Tennessee each have approximately 28
counties included in the HIDTA designation and funding cycle, he said
West Virginia only has nine.

McDowell County's inclusion helped propel the 2001 formation of the
local drug task force. Including one officer from each of the Mercer,
McDowell and Wyoming county sheriffs'
departments, the West Virginia State Police and the Princeton and
Bluefield police departments, the six-member unit is the only
organization in the three counties created specifically to deal with
the drug problem. Compared with places like Raleigh and Kanawha
counties, which each have three drug units assigned, Centeno said the
Southern Regional Drug and Violent Crimes Task Force is especially
effective and efficient.

"With less people, we're covering three times the area," he said.

"It's a very expensive operation, but really, we're very
cost-efficient," Centeno said.

Financing the fight

Currently, the Edward Byrne Justice Assistance Grant program, also
known as the Byrne/JAG program, provides $520 million to
multi-jurisdictional organizations that fight crime. It's a critical
funding source for cooperative law enforcement efforts, like the task
force, that target the manufacture, distribution and use of all drugs.

Unless lawmakers act quickly, that program will drop its funding to
only $170 million and cost task forces nationwide a large chunk of
their funding, possibly their existence.

Locally, the Southern Regional Drug and Violent Crimes Task Force
parent organizations contribute the officers and a portion of their
salaries in order to keep the task force running. Their forces also
routinely assist in executing the search and arrest warrants that
arise from task force investigations.

But, Centeno said federal funding and monies obtained through
investigation forfeitures furnish the remainder of the officers' pay,
state-of-the-art equipment needed to complete covert investigations
and money to buy the drugs needed for convictions in the courtroom.
The costs of in-depth, high-tech investigations run high.

"When a police officer investigates a report of a domestic or a
burglary, there are, of course, costs involved - the officer's pay,
his vehicle, the fuel to get there..." he said. "But, when we
investigate a report of drug activity, we have all of that, plus it
involves the cost of purchasing an illegal product - drugs. We have
to purchase them to get the evidence we need for a conviction."

Estimating controlled drug buys for the average local case run his
task force $200, Centeno figured his officers spend at least $60,000
a year just to purchase the drugs they need to seal the average of 300 cases.

He said the task force currently gets approximately $86,000 "that
barely covers a portion of [officers'] salaries," and another
$100,000 in federal grants and supplements that pay for overtime,
supplies, training, drug buys and more.

All together, he said federal funds account for about $200,000 of his
force's annual budget.
And, although many drug task forces could function largely on
property and financial forfeitures obtained as a result of
investigations, Centeno said most local drug dealers sell simply to
feed their own addictions. They often go to jail once the task force
investigations are complete, but Centeno said they rarely leave much
property or money behind to fund future operations.

Finding the funding

Centeno typically encourages southern West Virginia residents to call
him if they have a drug problem. Now, he's asking them to call their
congressional representatives if they believe his task force is part
of the solution.

"Otherwise, the drug dealers are going to run over us," he said.
"It's only logical that the drug dealers are going to run to the
place they feel safe."

He said the Appalachian region of southern West Virginia could offer
that haven, without the federal funds that keep SRDVCTF investigations going.

So far, U.S. Rep. Nick Rahall has been outspoken in his support of
the Byrne/JAG program and the task forces its funding supports. He
recently cosponsored H.R. 5180, which would provide emergency
supplements to the grant program.

"The JAG program enables local law enforcement and drug task forces
to shut down meth labs, take drugs out of our schools and keep
criminals off our streets," he said in a recent media release.
"Restoring these funds is critical for the safety of our communities,
families and children of West Virginia."

Also this spring, Sen. Jay Rockefeller signed a formal request urging
West Virginia's senior senator, Robert C. Byrd, and Sen. Thad
Cochran, chairman and ranking member, respectively, of the Senate
Appropriations Committee, to restore the grant money that funds more
than 4,000 officers and prosecutors working on more than 750 task
forces in all 50 states.

Centeno said he had not heard from Byrd on the push to provide
funding, but he said he would welcome support from legislators and
residents alike. He hoped for a time soon when he may concentrate
solely on drug busts instead of dollar signs and budgets.

"We're fighting for funding right now. We're fighting for something
we shouldn't even have to be worried about," he said. "We should be
out on the streets fighting drugs."
For more information on the Southern Regional Drug and Violent Crimes
Task Force, call 327-DRUGS.

To contact state lawmakers, call (304) 325-6222 to reach Rahall's
local office; (304) 253-9704 for Rockefeller; or (304) 342-5855 for
Byrd. Or, visit their respective websites at www.rahall.house.gov;
rockefelller.senate.gov or byrd.senate.gov.
Member Comments
No member comments available...