29 Indicted On Drug-Related Crimes According To Police

29 Indicted On Drug-Related Crimes According To Police

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To read a list of those indicted, click here.

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To read a list of those indicted, click here.

BRISTOL, Va. – They’re often called “addict dealers,” because they sell just to support their habits, and they were the focus of four-month investigation in Bristol, Va.

Based on the investigation, a grand jury issued 79 indictments against 29 such dealers, Police Chief William Price said Tuesday, during an afternoon news conference.

“It’s the saddest thing in our society, as far as I’m concerned,” Price said.

Officers took to the streets at 4:15 p.m. with arrest warrants for the 29 people indicted on various drug-related crimes. Inside two hours eight people had been arrested, said Police Capt. Jerry Barlow.

Price said he hopes that all 29 will be in custody by the end of the week.

During the news conference, held in the department’s lobby, Price said the department’s vice narcotics unit started the work on the investigation in August and targeted the addict dealers.

Neither the investigation nor the indictments indicate an increase in criminal drug activity in the north side of the city, Price said, but were a part of the ongoing war on drugs.

“As long as there is a demand, you’re going to have supply,” Price said. “Drug crime isn’t growing, it’s got enough of a foothold as it is.”

Last year, Price said, drugs were involved in 74 percent of all Virginia-side crimes.

Addict dealers are not the big guns of local drug traffic, Price said. They work the trickle-down of drug trade, “they’re addicts themselves,” Price said. “And they deal just enough to support their own habit.”
The charges in the indictments include numerous counts of distribution and conspiracy to distribute, Price said.

Two suspects also were charged with child abuse and neglect after police said they sold drugs in the presence of their infant child. And one juvenile petition was obtained against an underage suspect for distribution.

From August to December, undercover officers bought more than $4,000 worth of narcotics and prescription drugs, including cocaine, Oxycontin, morphine, Dilaudid, methadone, Suboxone, Lortab, marijuana and imitation controlled substances, Price said.

Five suspects were arrested immediately during that time in “buy-bust” operations, Price said, which resulted in the seizure of $6,500 in cash and $6,000 worth of cocaine.

Price emphasized the importance of targeting the drug problem from all angles – not just law enforcement. Last year, he said, his department sent 24 addicts for rehabilitation. Of them, 20 are clean, contributing members of society today, he said.

“We also work in this city with a coalition that works with the addicted,” he said. “We’re trying to help these people.”

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by evaningstar on February 25, 2009 at 3:56 pm

Take them all to Mexico and let them fight it out with the drug lords there. Let’s see how fast they straighten up and want to come back to the states and fly right…if they don’t get decapitated first. Give them a reason to love their country and want to do the right thing. Dont’ give them a home and food..make them fight for it.

Flag Comment Posted by oldgrunt on February 25, 2009 at 3:45 pm

To stopcrime:

Do you really want them covering your back or a loved ones, then give them training and automatic weapons. Way to think?

This is why we have jails. Keep giving them free food just lock them up.

Flag Comment Posted by stopcrime62 on February 25, 2009 at 8:15 am

I bet out of the 29 to be arrested, lets how many have a job. We need to revamp our welfare programs in this nation. We are supporting their habbits. Why should they work, free food, free place to live! I say, send them into the military. Front lines!

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