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News (Media Awareness Project) - US MO: More Potent 'White' Heroin Is Making Inroads
Title:US MO: More Potent 'White' Heroin Is Making Inroads
Published On:2004-01-04
Source:St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO)
Fetched On:2008-08-23 17:25:39
MORE POTENT "WHITE" HEROIN IS MAKING INROADS

Experts Fear Increased Violence And More Addicts As Use Here Is Growing
And Appears To Be Spreading To Younger People

A potent form of heroin is taking hold in the St. Louis area, making
addiction more accessible than ever and raising the risk of increased
violence among traffickers, authorities say.

So-called white heroin is displacing black tar heroin here as it has
in some larger cities, according to surveys by the Drug Enforcement
Administration. Officials say the switch to white heroin comes as
heroin use here is growing and appears to be spreading to younger addicts.

White heroin is of particular concern because it does not need to be
injected. That provides appeal to people who are squeamish about
giving themselves shots of black tar, either because they don't like
needles or they fear the spread of AIDS or hepatitis through shared
hypodermics.

"Traffickers are able to market this heroin better by saying you can
snort it or smoke it," said William Renton Jr., special agent in
charge of the DEA office in St. Louis.

Until now, black tar heroin from Mexico has dominated the St. Louis
market, authorities say. White heroin comes from Afghanistan and
southwest Asia. White heroin also is considerably more potent, raising
the risk of overdoses. The white heroin found in the St. Louis area
this year is as high as 28 percent pure morphine, nearly twice the
purity commonly found in the black tar variety, Renton explained.

Heroin traditionally has been associated with older junkies in urban
areas, but it now appears to be making inroads with young people of
diverse backgrounds.

"A lot of times the stereotype is that a typical heroin user is an
older person ... but that's not what you see," said Dr. Heidi Israel,
an assistant professor at St. Louis University School of Medicine who
studies heroin abuse.

Statistics from drug treatment now reflect users from all racial
groups, and include more young people than in the past, she explained.
"There is a younger population that is being represented in the
treatment data, more 18- to 24-year-olds."

Federal prosecutors in St. Louis brought heroin trafficking charges
against 53 people in the year that ended Sept. 30. That was up from 45
the prior year, which itself represented an increase from 21 the year
before that.

In Southern Illinois, federal prosecutors say their caseload of heroin
trafficking prosecutions has been steady since 2000, with no more than
10 defendants a year.

Renton said increased heroin use is more than an illusion from
stepped-up enforcement. "We're getting informant information and
source reporting that there is an increase in heroin," he emphasized.

A New Drug In Town

The DEA says it became aware of the growing presence of white heroin
through a program intended to track trends.

Under its Domestic Monitoring Program, the agency uses informers to
make 10 purchases of heroin on the streets of each of an array of
major cities four times a year. Lab testing determines the samples'
purity and origin.

For years, black tar predominated here, with white heroin showing up
about once a year, Renton said.

But in the first quarter of this year, five of the 10 purchases in the
St. Louis area were white heroin, he reported, which is more typically
found in New York, Chicago and other larger cities.

In the third quarter, the agency focused its purchases in the Metro
East area and came up with the white variety six times out of 10.
There were no samples taken in the second quarter for lack of funding,
he said.

Israel cautioned that it is "premature" to conclude that white heroin
is widely available, noting that what undercover informers are able to
buy may not represent a true proportion of what's for sale on the streets.

However, she acknowledged that it is understood among drug users that
some groups with Nigerian connections are selling white heroin in St.
Louis. Renton confirmed that at least one such group is under
investigation.

Booming Business

Whatever the type, heroin sales in the area appear to be
thriving.

In one small area of St. Louis, a gang sold an estimated $100,000
worth of black tar each week until police broke it up last year,
according to federal authorities.

The gang's two leaders, Brian White and David Foston, used safe houses
and had midlevel managers deploy dealers on the streets in its
territory around the intersection of Cass and Glasgow avenues,
according to the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives.

One informer told authorities that Foston had boasted of being on the
verge of reaching the $1 million mark in drug proceeds, according to a
sworn statement by ATF Agent Mark Demas.

The ring's business was so good that it sometimes caused traffic
backups, Assistant U.S. Attorney Jim Delworth said.

Its undoing was that its base was near the new Vashon High
School.

St. Louis Police Chief Joe Mokwa said the ring was a "pre-eminent
source of supply" that "was particularly salient to us because of its
proximity to a major high school."

The new Vashon, at 3035 Cass Avenue, is just a block and a half from
the intersection with Glasgow. It opened in the fall of 2002.

In December 2002, authorities arrested White, Foston and 16 others.
All have pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in St. Louis to heroin
trafficking charges.

Another big ring prosecuted last year included members of some
families involved in the Moorish Science Temple of America, a cultlike
group that saw many of its members imprisoned for heroin trafficking
and violent crimes in the early 1990s.

Mean Streets

Heroin peddlers are known to have a special propensity for violence,
Mokwa suggested. "Heroin traffickers seem to have a more aggressive
stance in controlling their operations than some of the other
narcotics groups."

Some of the recent cases in federal court seem to bear that
out.

In June 2001, an informer told authorities he had heard two members of
the Foston drug ring boast about killing Robert "Beaver" Wilson by
hanging him with a rope struck over a door.

Police checked records and found that on May 22, 2001, Wilson's death
had been reported to police as a suicide. The medical examiner's
office later determined it was a homicide.

Another informer later said the men meant to scare Wilson but that
"things got out of hand."

One of the two men named by the informer later pleaded guilty to
conspiracy in a heroin case and got 10 years in prison. His lawyer
said he had "vehemently denied" a role in any killings. Neither of the
men named by informers was ever charged with Wilson's murder.
Officials say that is not surprising. The principal informer had a
record of five convictions, and thus would have had dubious
credibility with a jury.

Wilson's death was not unusual. During the investigation of the
White-Foston gang, one informer was slain in a drive-by shooting,
according to the ATF.

Another informer warned officials that the gang had been involved with
murders, assaults and armed robberies, according to the ATF.

In another case, a man accused of distributing heroin, Qusai Mahasin,
arranged from prison for a witness against him to be shot last year,
prosecutors said.

The witness survived and limped into federal court to testify. Mahasin
was convicted of attempting to murder a witness and heroin
trafficking. He was sentenced to 55 years in prison.

When police arrested Leo Adams, one of the alleged leaders of another
heroin ring, in October 2001, he was using a colostomy bag, the result
of gunshot wounds.

He had been shot multiple times on May 26, 2001, the ATF said. Adams,
who admitted that he was awaiting a shipment of up to 300 ounces of
heroin at the time of his arrest, later pleaded guilty and got 30
years in prison.

Devastated Families

While the people who buy and sell heroin often die or go to prison,
broken families are left behind to bear witness to the drug's
destructive power.

Randall Jackson pleaded guilty in 2001 in federal court to possession
with intent to distribute heroin. In January, a judge sent him to
prison for 12 years.

His mother, Geraldine Jackson, who has held a job with a large local
company for 35 years, said it was desire for material possessions that
led her son astray. "When the kids get out there, they want to have
all the stuff," she said.

"The money aspect of it clouds a person's judgment," added her
husband, Vernon Jackson, who recently retired from work as a
supervisor in a federal agency. "These guys are making hundreds of
thousands of dollars. They can't make that kind of money at
McDonald's. And everybody wants these $100 tennis shoes, the jackets,
and all that. Cars, clothes and women - it comes with the trade."

The parents said they had fought their son's involvement in drug
trafficking for more than a decade. "Fifteen years I've been
struggling with this at night, and I prayed before I answered the
phone that it was not him dead," Geraldine Jackson said.

Now, Randall Jackson's four children are in different homes in St.
Louis and Atlanta, three with different mothers. One, a 9-year-old
boy, is living with Vernon and Geraldine Jackson.

"The people who really suffer are the parents," Geraldine Jackson said
after her son's sentencing. "Instead of being grandparents, we're
going to become parents again."

Deaths Are On The Rise

A series of bleak statistics also describe the drug's destructive
power. In 1993, seven people died from heroin - or a mixture of heroin
and cocaine and other substances - in St. Louis County, according to
the county medical examiner's office. That number has risen
erratically over the past decade, reaching 24 by 2002.

It is an equal-opportunity killer. Of those 24, officials said 21 were
white and three were black.

Of the 21 people who died of heroin overdoses in St. Louis that year,
14 were black and seven were white, the medical examiner's figures
show.

By contrast, Madison County has no heroin deaths in 2002 or 2003,
officials said.

To some extent, concerns about heroin are overshadowed by
methamphetamine, said Jim Topolski, a policy expert at the Missouri
Department of Mental Health.

Yet one national survey shows that from 1992 to 2002, heroin replaced
cocaine as the drug most often cited by people - after alcohol - who
are admitted to drug treatment programs.

There is no question that heroin is far more dangerous than most
drugs, said Dr. Chris Long, director of toxicology in the medical
examiner's offices of St. Louis and St. Louis County. He said it is
heavily addictive and depresses the central nervous system so
effectively that sometimes breathing just stops.
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