Title: drug market interventions
1drug market interventions
Using Strong Community Partnerships,
Intelligence, and Focused Deterrence to Reduce
Violent Crime in High Point, North Carolina
NCLM Annual Conference, October 25-27, 2009
Major Marty A. Sumner
2The Setting
- Street drug market is toxic to neighborhoods.
There is a direct nexus between street level
dealing and violence. - These neighborhoods are known for years as a drug
and prostitution market. - They are the target of numerous and regular
undercover operations or stings. - Despite numerous arrests the situation persists.
- Over time the community has lost faith in the
ability of police to impact this problem. - People are afraid.
3The Street Dealers
- The pressure we apply through law enforcement
does not equal their day to day risks. - They expect to be robbed, they expect to be
arrested, JUST NOT EVERY DAY. - Selling one dose at a time, to people they do not
know, in competition with others, keeps them
armed and on edge. (assaults, armed robbery, home
invasions) - They take the communitys apathy or indifference
as approval. - They must be brought to a MOMENT OF CHOICE.
4Theory and Concepts
- Drug Markets versus the Drug Problem
- Small numbers of drug dealers
- Nonlinear market dynamics
- Formal sanctions matter but should be minimized
- Informal sanctions matter most of all
- Norms, narratives and persistent misunderstanding
- Help matters
- Vital hidden common ground
5Strategic Intervention
- Directly addressing norms and narratives
- City-wide strategy with beachheads
- Careful identification of all players
- Identifying influentials
- Focusing services
- Creating formal deterrence banking cases
- Beachheads maintenance
- Direct communication with dealers
6Logic Model
Resource Delivery Community Support Phase
Identification Phase
Notification Phase
Community and Police Dialog and Discussion of the
Strategy
Identification of Target Geographic Area
ID of Individuals Operating in Target
Area Undercover Buys
Police Focus
Eliminate Overt Markets Reduce Drug and Violent
Crimes
Notification Session Call-in
Community Focus
Immediate Prosecution of the Most Violent or
Dangerous
Community Police Home Visit
Resource Coordinator
Notification List Compiled
Source Dr. James M. Frabutt et al., at The
Center for Youth, Family, and Community
Partnerships at the University of North Carolina
at Greensboro serving as the Project Safe
Neighborhoods Research Partner for the United
States Attorneys Office, Middle District of
North Carolina. Supported by PSN funding (Award
2002-GP-CX-0220) through the U.S. Department of
Justice, Office of Justice Programs.
7Operational Steps
- Crime Mapping
- Survey
- Incident Review
- Undercover Operations
- Mobilize Community
- Contact with Offenders Family
- Call-in / Notification
- Enforcement
- Follow Up
82003 All Layers Combined Density Map
Daniel Brooks
West End
East Central
Southside
9Step 2 Survey
- Survey police officers, probation officers, vice
officers and community members to identify
dealers - Identify locations as well as persons
- Create master list of dealers and locations from
the surveys - Small number of dealers in each area
- West End 26
- Daniel Brooks 21
- Southside 25
- East Central 36
10Step 3 Incident Review
- Vice/Narcotics detectives conduct a complete
incident review of all dealers - All reports, contacts with police and
intelligence are examined through link analysis - The list of offenders is refined to include only
the street dealers based on the review
11refining the list of dealers
- Is the dealer still active? In this area?
- Street level or mid-level?
- History of violence?
- Pending charges?
- As many as ten were dropped from each master
list. - Our final list for each area included
12Step 4 Undercover Operations
- Each location and offender is investigated
- Drug houses are photographed
- Undercover purchases are made from individuals,
each buy is videotaped with audio - The investigation requires only a judges
signature to make the arrest
13Step 5 Mobilize Community Commitment
- City Council members, the Mayor and the City
Manager are briefed - A series of public meetings are scheduled in the
target area - Strategy shared fully with the community Is
this something you will support?
14Step 5 Building Community Trust
- Building community capacity and leadership
- Acknowledge that traditional enforcement tactics
were not effective and caused unintended harm to
community - Community has to set the social standards for
their neighborhood - Promises have been made and broken
- Focus on new way of doing business and
reconciliation
15Step 6 Contact With Offenders Family
- Identify influentials
- Small groups of Officers, Community members and
Clergy visit immediate family members of the
offender - Explain goals, invite family to participate
- Join in asking offender to quit
- Family encouraged to attend call-in
- Letter from Chief
16Step 7 Call in/Notification
- Face-to-Face notification with offenders,
community (HPCAV) and law enforcement (VCTF). - Strong community voice youre ours, youre
doing wrong, you need to stop and well help you
- Law enforcement delivers a two pronged message
- Drug dealing and violence will no longer be
tolerated - Offenders are hereby put on official notice
you could be arrested now, you will be arrested
if we know you are back at it - Through a resource coordinator they are offered
community-based help
17Citizen Group (HPCAV)
- HPCAV 501c3
- Weed and Seed
- Public Defender
- County Schools
- Sickle Cell Disease Assoc.
- Community Development
- Guilford Community College
- Batts Consultants
- Central Carolina Legal Services
- CHILDWATCH
- Family Services
- Crisis Womens Shelter
- United Way
- HP Regional Health System
- Guilford County Mental Health
- ASK
- Employment Security Commission
- Adult Protective Services
- Alcohol Drug Services
- Numerous Ministries
- HUD
- High Point University
- Center for the Study of Social Issues
- Caring Services
- All State and Federal Law Enforcement
18Step 8 Enforcement
- Officers and Community are careful to watch for
the first signs of drug dealing - Immediate investigation of drug complaints
additional officers are assigned to the area for
the first few weeks - Informants revisit confirmed drug locations
- Any complaints involving a notified offender
result in the warrants being signed and their
arrest - District Attorney assigned one prosecutor to
these cases
19Step 9 Follow Up
- Follow up contact is made with offenders to see
if they are getting the help they need - Community members are encouraged to keep in
contact with notified offenders. Mentors are
assigned - Newsletters / Flyers to the community contain
information of arrests or success stories - Officers attend community watches in the area
- Property owners notified of nuisance abatement
20Quantitative Analysis
Notification / Call-in
100 Days
150 Days
200 Days
250 Days
300 Days
Etc
365 Days
Etc
365 Days
300 Days
250 Days
200 Days
100 Days
150 Days
Pre Call in
Post Call in
21Violent Crime Change West End Neighborhood
Decrease over 4 years 57
22Drug Crime Change West End Neighborhood
Decrease over 4 years 25
23Changes in Crime Over the Last 565 Days in West
End
24Fifteen Year Analysis of Violent Crime City-wide
25Qualitative
- Markets closed overnight!
- Bible school attendance up at English Road
Baptist Church - Calls for service increased 5 but type of calls
has shifted - 911 caller on homicide has change of heart,
converts from reluctant witness - Defendant complains he cannot provide substantial
assistance - No homicides, rapes, or gun assaults in target
area since the call-in - Sustained for over 4 years, replicated in Daniel
Brooks, Southside, East Central neighborhoods
26Tracking Notified Offenders
27(No Transcript)
28Communication With Community
- Maintain the hyper sensitive lines of
communication with the community members and
leaders - Published a single contact number for police
allowing citizens to report activity - Newsletter for continued updates
- Flyers informing new members of the neighborhood
about the initiative - Attend neighborhood watch meetings
29Contact with Offenders
- Helping to keep the pressure on, reminding them
what behavior we will not tolerate, they know
they are not forgotten - High Point Community Against Violence
- Through the Resource Coordinator
- Community Outreach Officers
- Probation Officers
- Assigned to mentors
- Notification of offenders returning from prison
to the neighborhood
30Communication With Beat Officers
- Assembly room bulletin board
- MDT messages
- Bi-weekly meetings
- Supervisors on opposite rotations responsible for
coordinating activity - Intranet Blog
31Immediate Response To Threats
- Major case review of all Part 1 offenses
- Immediate response to drug complaints
- Personal notification to residents of complaint
location, flyer and strong message - Attempt consent search knock talk
- High visibility disruption of business
- Undercover buy and search warrant
- Response to prostitution
32Monitoring Physical Conditions Of The Neighborhood
- Vacant houses reported to Inspections and boarded
up - Insufficient street lighting reported
- Trash removed
- Unkept yards
- Graffiti covered over or removed
- Condemned houses demolished
33Outcomes
- Focused and data driven, seen as fair by the
community (redeemable) - Not a traditional police crackdown, community
regains faith in police, community capital - Results were immediate
- SUSTAINABLE
- Shares responsibility for community safety with
the community and holds the offenders accountable - Decrease in violent crime was substantial
- New mutual understandings and racial dialogue
34QUESTIONS?
Major Marty A. Sumner Chief of Staff High Point
Police Department 1009 Leonard Ave High Point, NC
27260 336-887-7817 marty.sumner_at_highpointnc.gov