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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NY: Cops Believe Teen Was Duped By Drug Dealers
Title:US NY: Cops Believe Teen Was Duped By Drug Dealers
Published On:2002-03-08
Source:Times Union (NY)
Fetched On:2008-08-31 00:42:10
COPS BELIEVE TEEN WAS DUPED BY DRUG DEALERS

Police Say Mentally Disabled Suspect Was Caught Transporting 60 Bags of
Heroin on Bus

A mentally disabled teenager from Brooklyn was recruited by New York City
drug dealers to bring a shipment of heroin to Albany on board a bus, police
said.

The 15-year-old boy was stopped by undercover Albany County sheriff's
investigators after exiting a bus at the Albany bus terminal late
Wednesday. Investigators said they found 60 bags of heroin labeled "Dead
Presidents" stuffed in clothing inside a knapsack the teen was carrying.

Three young men also on board the bus may have been with the teenager, but
authorities did not have reason to detain them and they quickly left the
bus terminal, said sheriff's Inspector John Burke.

"I've been doing this stuff for a long time, but this kid had the body of a
15-year-old and the mind of an 8-year-old," Burke said. "These kids
buffaloed him and conned him into carrying this stuff. They told him he was
going to see his aunt in Albany."

The teenager was arraigned on felony drug charges in Family Court and is
being held at the Capital District Secure Juvenile Detention Facility near
Albany County jail. He was not charged as an adult, and his case will be
handled by the county attorney.

The accused teen lives with his aunt in Brooklyn. He allegedly was lured to
the New York City Port Authority on Wednesday by suspected drug dealers who
called him and offered to buy him a bus ticket to Albany to visit a
relative who investigators said does not exist. He was instructed where to
sit on the bus and where to go once he arrived in Albany, Burke said.

"I think I've seen just about every con, but this kid does not know how old
he really is. I hope we can get him help," Burke said. "I don't think he's
guilty for what he was caught with. I don't think this kid knows the
difference between right and wrong."

Officials said that since the case is being handled in Family Court, it is
unlikely he will serve time in prison. But he will remain in custody while
officials determine how to handle the case.
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