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Friday, September 4, 2009

Prosecutors Charge Another Participant in City Drug Intervention Program

Posted by on Fri, Sep 4, 2009 at 6:11 PM

Another participant in the city's Drug Market Initiative (DMI)—an effort aimed at eliminating the open-air drug market along the 23rd Avenue Corridor in the Central District—has failed out of the program.

King County prosecutors have filed drug possession charges against Terrance Lee Jenkins, 51, after, police records say, he was caught carrying several crack rocks and a wad of cash late last month.

Early last month, prosecutors and police offered 18 alleged drug dealers in the Central District clemency for previous drug crimes—which had been documented by police, but not charged by prosecutors—if they gave up dealing. Jenkins is the seventh DMI candidate to be charged for a drug crime since the program began last month.

Police records say that on August 29th, officers received complaints about "vice activity" in the 3100 block of East Spring Street, near Madrona Elementary in the Central District. Officers found Jenkins sitting in the passenger seat of a light-colored Pontiac, next to a woman and two open containers of alcohol.

When officers struck up a conversation with Jenkins, he began "sweating profusely," was "talking very fast," and appeared to be high, police records say. Officers searched Jenkins and found two crack rocks and $724 in his pants, and a crack pipe underneath his seat.

Jenkins' arrest is yet another example of an alarmingly rapid failure rate for DMI participants. As I wrote in the paper this week:

Under the initiative, the city is essentially expecting dealers to immediately give up their lifestyle or face harsh consequences. But it's hard to believe that people who have been addicted to drugs for decades will voluntarily turn their lives around so quickly.

According to prosecutors, Jenkins has a half-dozen drug charges, attempted burglary, theft and 60 warrants dating back to 1984.

While neighbors in the Central District seem to think the neighborhood has gotten quieter since the DMI was implemented, police still aren't sure. I spent some time with East Precinct Captain Paul McDonagh earlier today, and while McDonagh says he's heard plenty of anecdotal evidence from neighbors, SPD doesn't yet have data indicating whether the DMI has been a success. "I'm not ready to say DMI is the best thing since sliced bread," McDonagh says.

If indeed the 23rd Avenue corridor has gotten quieter, it's still unclear where drug dealers might have gone. Previous anti-drug efforts around Seattle by SPD have simply moved dealers and buyers to other neighborhoods, and indeed Jenkins was arrested a little more than a half-mile away from 23rd, in the Madrona neighborhood.

I asked McDonagh whether he thinks the DMI will play out like previous drug crackdowns, simply shuffling dealers around. "If they're going somewhere else, I can't stop them," he says, "But am I just moving [the drug market] somewhere else? My information says no."

 

Comments (9) RSS

Oldest First Unregistered On Registered On Add a comment
Will in Seattle 1
If you shut it down, it will move - just as all the panhandlers and alcoholics moved to Fremont and the U District when they shut down Pioneer Square, the drug market will just move again.

And if it moves north of the Ship Canal or to a non-poor neighborhood, we're just going to have to un-elect another Mayor and incumbent city council again.
Posted by Will in Seattle http://www.facebook.com/WillSeattle on September 4, 2009 at 7:19 PM
Baconcat 2
I have no problem running this mess up north of the ship canal.

In fact, I'll give them directions. Get on the 48 and don't get off until you get kicked off.
Posted by Baconcat on September 4, 2009 at 9:19 PM
3
"I have no problem running this mess up north of the ship canal."

Please, the politicians know who butters their bread. Nice little fantasy though.
Posted by Roger That on September 4, 2009 at 9:50 PM
4
Yes in this microwave world if you don't have complete satisfaction in 2 and 1/2 minutes then it's a failure.

NOT!

The point is not that many or even all of the first 18 dealers wind up getting arrested. They would have been arrested anyway - that was the point of the meeting - the police and prosecutors already have enough to bust you. So what if the police etc. held one public meeting before they went ahead and did what they already had enough evidence gathered to do.

The proof will be is if the additional publicity this generated and the community's buy-in to this approach will eventually put enough pressure to start getting some of the next wave to re-think their decisions. In other cities this has appeared to happen. Not 100% but significantly.

So give more than 30 days before you write it off and go back the business-as-usual way of doing things, which, by the way, hasn't worked any better.
Posted by crack ninja on September 4, 2009 at 10:53 PM
5
kill the pushers
Posted by kill the pushers on September 5, 2009 at 12:29 AM
6
"pleez be a good person of colour and don't sell drugz anymore homies"
- hand-wringing naive white-guilt seattle "progressive"
Posted by - hand-wringing naive white-guilt seattle "progressive" on September 5, 2009 at 9:54 AM
7
I hear you points on all sides of this! IT IS ALL SAD! It has been in the (CD) area for many many many generations!
Do to think you can hand a ADDICT options?? They are not in the right mind to make decisions if they are drugged up right? Were is the COMMON SENSE OF THIS WORLD?
**If anything, hand them TWO OPTIONS to a FULL TREATMENT program (with out financial obligations). YES PEOPLE WE WILL PAY FOR IT TODAY! ARENT WE ALREADY PAYING FOR IT THROUGH WELFORE OR ALL OF THE KIDS SHOOTING & KILLING EACH OTHER OUT THERE!
Welfare doesn't have a program that will make a SUBSTANTIAL difference to them.------->(1week in treatment CAN NOT HELP at this point)
OR
HAND THEM TIME IN THE JAIL were they belong for commiting crimes that they have been found guilty of! (at this point they have been warned enough and THEY KNOW WE WONT DO SH##!)
If you are tired of seeing the same drug dealer on the corner then DO SOMETHING! CALL THE POLICE AND TELL THEM! KEEP CALLING THEM! THEY WILL GET THE POINT!
Being in Possesion of drugs is a STRIKE and you only get 3 then its off to meet some new friends in the PENATENTIONAIRY!!
Last of all, YOU CAN NOT MAKE ANYONE GET SOBER! THEY NEED TO DECIDE!
Life can not change unless YOU make the decession to change it! So what are you going to do instead of iming about all of these issues you brought up??? How did you change this situation? CHANGE IT!
Posted by Really then do something to make a change... on September 5, 2009 at 4:09 PM
8
@7: I'm not following you. Perhaps if you typed more of your points in all caps I would understand you better.
Posted by WELFORE PENATENTIONAIRY!! on September 5, 2009 at 5:12 PM
lizzie 9
This comment thread made me sad. STOP ARRESTING DRUG USERS. SPD, you are supposed to help people. These people don't have any other economic opportunity. Provide them some other opportunity, or leave them alone and focus on actual crimes.
Posted by lizzie on September 6, 2009 at 12:02 PM

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