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News (Media Awareness Project) - US SC: Police Patrol Miles From Home
Title:US SC: Police Patrol Miles From Home
Published On:2004-12-20
Source:Charlotte Observer (NC)
Fetched On:2008-01-17 05:56:01
POLICE PATROL MILES FROM HOME

2 City Officers Help With Drug Searches On I-95 Near Santee

SANTEE, S.C. - Charleston police officers have strayed about 70 miles
from home to help this small town patrol Interstate 95 for drugs
traveling between New York City and Miami.

The arrangement, which involves two veteran officers patrolling about
four days a week along a 2-mile stretch of I-95 in Santee, brings
Charleston half of the assets seized and helps keep drugs off the
streets, Police Chief Reuben Greenberg said.

A contract signed in 2002 so far has netted Charleston $85,000 -- not
enough to cover the salaries of the two officers. But city officials
say getting those drugs and traffickers off the highways is a benefit.

"It's an opportunity to interdict drugs, some of which would be coming
down here," Charleston Mayor Joe Riley said.

The cities of Sumter and Florence have similar patrolling arrangements
with departments in their interstate areas, Riley wrote in a memo to
City Council members. Police estimate that one in 10 cars traveling
through South Carolina on Interstate 95 carry illegal cargo. Most of
that is drugs.

Some of the cargo includes wanted felons, guns, bomb-making factories
and rolling methamphetamine labs that cruise the interstate hoping to
blend in among truckers, commuters and families on vacation.

Finding those criminals proves a challenge for the various law
enforcement agencies that patrol the interstate. But success pumps
hundreds of thousands of dollars each year into police budgets from
seizures of cash and other property.

"When (drivers) see the marked car, the average drug dealer freezes up
on the road," said Santee Police Chief Robert Williams, who has seven
officers on his force and said he is thankful for the Charleston help.

Charleston officers also wrote 1,500 warning and traffic tickets in
their I-95 patrols, seized three vehicles and 13 handguns, caught
seven fugitives and found thousands of dollars worth of cocaine, crack
cocaine, marijuana, mushrooms and Ecstasy, according to police statistics.

Several members of the Charleston City Council didn't know about the
patrols and said they don't want to micromanage where Greenberg
deploys his officers.

The city's share of seizures hasn't been enough to pay the salaries --
about $100,000 -- of the two officers stationed in Santee; it also
doesn't include the cost of gas or vehicles.

Some City Council members said Charleston taxpayers shouldn't have to
fund I-95 drug hunts.

"I don't think it's good public policy to have officers of the city of
Charleston contracted out to another entity in a far-off jurisdiction
when we have plenty of drug problems here," said Councilman Henry Fishburne.

Councilman Bob George knew nothing of the deal signed in 2002. "It's a
noble effort, but I think we ought to start at home first."

Greenberg defended the patrols, saying if police concentrate only on
the drugs that pop up inside their boundaries, "you're going to lose
the drug war."
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