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SPECIAL REPORT: Chasing life-shattering crack
London police knew there was a crack cocaine problem in the area around Dundas and Ontario streets, an otherwise quiet neighbourhood just east of downtown.

Eliminating board of control may not save money, says expert
London may be the only city in Canada to still have a board of control, but that's no reason to eliminate it, says Western political science professor Andrew Sancton.

Air quality good so far, but smog advisory season is back
As a cool, wet spring gives way to warmer, sunnier days, the threat of bad air and smog advisories is back, say environment officials.

Renovations will brighten up UCC exterior
Concrete bleachers outside the University Community Centre are being ripped up and replaced with a new, more organic facade at a cost of more than $1 million.

Heritage status sought for west-end park area
A section of London long associated with Sunday walks and bicycle paths is under scrutiny by experts seeking to designate this west-end area as a cultural heritage landscape.

CANDIDATE PROFILE: Ivan Kasiurak, Mayoral candidate
Q: How many times have run for mayor?

Babies being sought for charity calendar
The Mom and Caregiver is seeking babies and toddlers for its Captured Moments contest.

Blood services assumes supply still untainted
Canadian Blood Services has issued a national appeal to build a stockpile of blood, which will serve as a "safety net" in case West Nile virus appears in humans before the agency's screening for West Nile can begin July 1.

Toxic spill probe ongoing
Charges may be brought forth within the next few weeks following a toxic spill in the Thames River, which killed thousands of fish last August. The investigation is still underway.

Ladybugs get fresh coat of paint before adoption by new owners
The pet rock may have made a comeback, but this time in an environmentally friendly form with a mission to help rid the neighbourhood of pesticides.

Sunshine walk makes dreams come true
The sun finally came out from behind the clouds as Haley Dunn sang the Sunshine Dreams for Kids theme song at the end of the five-kilometre RadioShack-Sunshine Walk for Children's Dreams at Greenway Park.

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SPECIAL REPORT:New homes for the aged create buzz
The halls of Dearness Home are buzzing with excitement as residents such as Norman Barber speculate about what their new home will look like.

Pedophile playground
It used to be hidden, but the anonymity and protection of the Internet has given child pornography free reign, say Toronto police, who claim wherever and however technology allows, child porn is traded and sold.

Sexual secret spurs deadly dilemma
Ang Heddington lived two lives -- one as the woman she was born, one as the man she wanted to be.

Ex-UWO professor bludgeoned to death
Friends of a popular former UWO professor were stunned yesterday to learn she had been found bludgeoned to death at her Ottawa home, her brother-in-law facing a murder charge.

Numbers of non-believers on the rise
Maureen Sullivan's religious beliefs are like those of a growing number of Canadians. She has none.

Ease limits on troubled man, hearing told
A schizophrenic should be allowed supervised visits to the county where he nearly killed a woman, according to a joint submission yesterday to the Ontario Review Board.

Troubled man's inner voices led to bloody attack
It took Andrew Bannister 15 minutes to learn how to draw a knife from his cargo pants and strike in the blink of an eye. The hard part was this: How do you plan to kill someone who can hear you think?

From dairy queen to udderly common
First, Pearl the cow.

London's First Lady
It was a rich, dark brown -- the original colour of Beryl Ivey's beautifully coifed white hair.

GOING TO POT: Majority pushes legal pot
Public support to relax Canada's marijuana laws is rising quickly, finds a national poll that shows a decisive 83 per cent want pot prohibition to be less stringent.

THE QUIRKY CLASSROOM: Palms have pupils beaming
All eyes are on teacher Wanda Zynomirski this morning.

Grisly death, lonely house, a bucket of coins
Three months after the grisly murder, this remote red-brick farmhouse on a desolate stretch of country road still looks lonely.

Rash of child deaths 'blows away' coroner
The London area's rash of child deaths has reached unprecedented heights, says Ontario's deputy chief coroner.

Vote tests wind for divided right
Olive Clarke has seen enough in her 90 years not to get too excited about the just-called federal byelection taking shape in her riding.

Smoking debate still rages in region
The smoke may have cleared in London, but the battle over lighting up in public places rages on in the region.

The $100,000 Club
Under the Public Sector Salary Disclosure Act, the names of public employees paid $100,000 or more in 2002 must be released.

Signs point to spring election
Anyone looking for a sign a provincial election lies ahead need look no further than the corner of York and Colborne streets in downtown London.

Too much trash
An abundance of dump space could be filled in a flash if Southwestern Ontario municipalities are forced to accept Toronto trash.

125 years in the making
Alumna Joan Hamilton is four decades younger than her alma mater.

Can Western still attract top athletes?
Athletes want to win and they want to attend institutions that have a winning tradition.

Port's history mirrors lake shipping fortunes
Nobody's standing on the beach to watch the Peter R. Cresswell pass Port Stanley.

Life on the lakes
Salt is in the air.

Project aimed at young gamblers
The YMCA-YWCA of London is betting a pilot program launched today will help young people cope with gambling pressures.

Shinerama hits city malls
The tiny bongo was a gift from his parents. Yesterday, Fanshawe College student Ben Morgan was busy beating the Kenyan instrument outside Galleria London at Clarence and King streets, hoping to raise money for cystic fibrosis research.

Library's big move
It's time for London to say goodbye to its old Central Library.

SPECIAL REPORT: Grief without end
The mother walks past the bedroom every day and she does not know what to do with the door.

SPECIAL REPORT: Crack in the ceiling
While some cheered, others screamed in dismay and a few even quit over Western's new sports era, one goal of the restructuring of varsity sports is getting closer to reality.

SPECIAL REPORT: Crack in the ceiling
While some cheered, others screamed in dismay and a few even quit over Western's new sports era, one goal of the restructuring of varsity sports is getting closer to reality.

SPECIAL REPORT: Night riders
Sgt. Scott Hessel sticks his head through the window opening of a car.

SPECIAL REPORT: A bottle, a car and shattered lives
MILLHAVEN PENITENTIARY -- From behind the cold, faceless walls of a stark maximum security prison near Kingston, Eric St. Onge insists he's a lucky man.

SPECIAL REPORT: Air it and they will watch
Remember scraping together a few quarters for a corner store candy run?

SPECIAL REPORT: Three days and nights without a home
Free Press reporter Federico Barahona abandoned his comfortable apartment, all his money, and most of his possessions to sample the cold, hard and sometimes cruel realities of a life on the streets.

SPECIAL REPORT THE CITY: Schoolyard violence crosses the line
She's self-assured, polite and friendly -- the kind of 17-year-old who'd make a parent proud. And she's telling me terrible things.

SPECIAL REPORT AT CITY HALL: Blast from the past?
The campaign for the next civic election a year from now may have a distinctly "retro" look. Here's the skinny.

SPECIAL REPORT AT CITY HALL: Will they . . . or won't they?
MAYOR ANNE MARIE DECICCO -- C+

SPECIAL REPORT: Karen's story
Kiwi takes command of the hunt from the front seat of the cab.

Truck targeted in hunt for sniper
Md. -- Investigators hunting a sniper responsible for 10 attacks in the Washington area released their first wanted poster -- composite images of a white box truck -- after authorities confirmed yesterday an eighth death was linked to the killer.

SPECIAL REPORT: House of Horrors
Editor's note: The following story contain graphic information that might not be suitable for all readers.

SPECIAL REPORT: 'Personification of evil'
Editor's note: The following story contain graphic information that might not be suitable for all readers.

SPECIAL REPORT: Mystery man
A former business associate of Sal Vecchio, the millionaire Londoner with suspected mob ties who was found slain in a swamp nearly four years ago, is in hiding and fears for his life, The Free Press has learned.

SPECIAL REPORT: Did he know too much?
Free Press reporter John Herbert takes a look at the life of Gerry Stirling -- that's one of his names -- who has been on the run since the slaying of Londoner Salvatore (Sammy) Vecchio on a rural roadside west of London.

BIKER BUST: Raids nab most Outlaws
Two-thirds of the members of a notorious motorcycle gang are locked in a London jail after provincewide raids this week.

BIKER BUST: Outlaws smashed
More than 500 police officers swooped down on at least 55 members of the Outlaws motorcycle club in 11 Ontario cities yesterday, including London and Woodstock.

BIKER BUST: 'These guys are street punks'
The Outlaws? Why not the Hells Angels?

BIKER BUST: Police squash biker ring

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A crack cocaine investigation revealed a much bigger problem than police imagined.

SPECIAL REPORT: Chasing life-shattering crack

London police knew there was a crack cocaine problem in the area around Dundas and Ontario streets, an otherwise quiet neighbourhood just east of downtown.

But the problem was much bigger than they thought.

What started out as a short-term investigation targeting known dealers ballooned into Project Impact, an intensive five-month undercover operation that led to charges against 52 persons in the area over the last week.

At stake is the future of the neighbourhood, because crack, one of the most addictive drugs available on the street, destroys families and contributes to prostitution, burglary and petty theft, police say.

Police came across one user during the investigation whose crack addiction cost him his $200,000 west London home. By the time police found him, he was living in a Dundas Street hotel.

"A $200,000-plus home all gone -- all for crack," said one officer.

What's more, during Project Impact, three shootings were linked to drug trafficking in the area, one only steps from where London police blitzed dealers last week.

In a rare interview, an undercover London police officer agreed to speak to The Free Press on the condition his identity be protected.

"Initially, we certainly knew there was a problem,'' says the officer who headed up Project Impact. "Although we had intelligence, spending time in the area we learned the problem was larger than we originally thought."

The crackdown will mean drastic changes for residents in the area.

Many of the prostitutes dealing crack to supplement their income are now in custody. The users, from the homeless to highly paid professionals who lost their jobs and families because of their addiction, have moved elsewhere.

On the stretch of Dundas Street near Western Fair, crack cocaine has been the scourge of residents who live in historic homes on the otherwise quiet and leafy streets nearby.

"In a situation like Dundas and Ontario, the vast majority of people who live in the neighbourhood are not drug users, are not traffickers and have a right to live there in peace," said the detective.

Fred Tranquilli, the Ward 3 council member who represents the area, agrees.

"The people who live in the community are certainly hard-working upstanding families," he says. "If people from other parts of the city decide they're going to take up a spot to do business in your neighbourhood, there's not a whole lot you can do about it besides ask police for help."

Area residents are often witnesses to the crime that happens in a neighbourhood ridden with mercenary crack dealers, desperate prostitutes and hyped-up users.

During the recent raids, London police, with help from the OPP and RCMP, searched six homes and businesses on Dundas between Ontario and Quebec streets.

So far, 57 people have been charged, most with trafficking offences. Another 29 are still wanted by police.

Most area businesses declined to talk about the raids and the impact they've had on the neighbourhood.

But police say the situation has greatly improved.

"We're not naive to think there's not still crack in the city to be purchased, but for the people at Dundas and Ontario, they can go outside and know they're not going to encounter the same situation as they did in the past," the detective said.

Tranquilli said he fears the one-time sweep won't change anything unless a long-term strategy is in place.

But the raids last week are a step in the right direction, said Paul Whitehead, a University of Western sociology professor.

"One of the things that's going to be very important is the extent to which the prosecutions are successful," said Whitehead, referring to the dealers who have been charged.

It wasn't long ago, he noted, that police raided body-rub parlours, charging 38 people, only to see those charges withdrawn earlier this year because prosecuting attorneys said they didn't have enough evidence to convict.

Tranquilli thinks surveillance cameras should be considered.

"That type of activity -- drug dealing and prostitution -- I think would be impacted if people knew there were surveillance cameras and they were monitoring licence plates and activities," he said.

Addicts who have lost everything -- sometimes spending as much as $2,000 a day feeding their addiction -- often turn to prostitution, robbery and petty theft to score a "slice of pie," a common phrase used for crack because of the way it's manufactured.

"With that kind of expense, it doesn't take long for people to lose their homes, cars, and certainly when you lose those things you lose your family," said the undercover London detective.

A high from crack lasts an hour at most, police say.

Addicts come out of the high feeling paranoid and a strong urge for more drugs.

"The addicts themselves will tell you they call it 'chasing the high.' They will chase the high for days on end and they'll do nothing except go from one piece of crack to another," the detective said.

"We estimate that when people are on a crack run, they would administer the drug three times an hour," said Linda Sibley, executive director of Alcohol and Drug Services of Thames Valley.

"When they (addicts) are on a run . . . it can be a full-time preoccupation. It can consume a lot of your day getting the money to do the drug, getting the drug and going somewhere to use it."

Crack is so highly addictive in part because it's smoked, meaning it gets into an addict's system quickly, starting with the lungs and spreading to the brain.

"The faster you get high the faster you also lose your high, so the need to use again happens more quickly," Sibley said.

Police say next to methamphetamine, crack is the hardest drug addiction to break.

Crack started showing up on the streets of New York City in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

There was no crack in London in 1990 until the latter part of the year, police say.

Since then it has become prevalent, spreading to every corner of the city.

It is now one of the most common illegal drugs in the province.

But police say the crack problem in the city is not out of control.

"It's certainly not a situation where people need to be running for the hills because we have a huge crack problem," the London detective said.

Last year, police seized more than $180,000 worth of crack, about 900 grams.

Area addiction counsellors say crack cocaine is in the top five addictions reported.

It used to be in the top three, behind alcohol and marijuana, before gambling took its place two years ago.

-- -- --

WHO'S CHARGED

London police have charged 52 people with crack trafficking-related offences in relation to Project Impact. They are:

Melvin Albert, 34; Christine Beaton, 42; Betty Begeman, 41; Darlene Blackman, 40; Nicole Bowen, 35; Ronald Branton, 40; Tammy Brayman, 30; Emanuel Caires, 32; .Shawn Centen, 19; Michelle Clews, 32; Marion Cochrane, 41; Michelle Doxtator, 34; Joseph Farquhrson, 40; Chanel Farrah, 29; Steven Freeman, 25; David Fuentes, 21; Kevin Grant, 30; Erica Greason, 20; Robert Hazel, 27; Nathan Herman, 35; Susanne Hickson, 35; Greg Ireland, 25; Gerald James, 43; Esther Jones, 43; Chadwick Kelly, 30; William Kerslake, 39; Ricardo Langley, 27; Frederick Lindsay 32; Jessie Liscombe, 52; Amanda McConnell, 25; Kelly McNeil, 39; Sheila Mishik, 42; Joanne Monk, 54; Evelyn Morton, 36; Marilyn Oliver, 34; Lorraine Oxford, 37; Jennifer Pasternak, 20; Andrea Peimli, 35; Julie Pyke, 25; Tyler Sankey, 21; Nellie Smedley, 42; Robyn Spiers, 22; Jimmy Titus, 31; Kristell Unick, 35; Shannon Vank, 27; Joely Vanstone, 31; Jason Waldeck, 30; Rebecca Watt, 29; Diane Wigle, 35; a 16-year-old male youth; a 16-year-old female youth; and a 17-year-old male youth.

During the takedown of Project Impact, police also charged Karen Borrie, 39, Kevin MacKenzie, 30, and Karline Taylor, 26, with possession of crack cocaine. April Gauvin, 38, and Jennifer Kettle, 30, were wanted on outstanding warrants and were charged with failing to appear.

WHO POLICE ARE STILL SEEKING

London police are still looking for 29 people in relation to Project Impact. They are:

Desmond Allen, 26; Tomikeo Alphonso, 22; David Blair, 33; Lorrice Burke, 38; Andrew Burton, 21; April Devost, 23; Jordan Edmonds, 22; David Elliott, 28; Barbara Gibson, 31; Joseph Hardy, 26; Thomas Hayward, 40; Justin Hogg, 22; Kendra Lamarre, 21; Andrew Leach, 36; Rodney Luno, 24; Maurice Myers, 19; Dwayne Pitter, 21; Kenneth Prince, 40; Vivian Rinn, 41; Marie Saucier, 38; Schell St. Pierre, 27; Patrick Thomas, 29; Timothy Vording, 21; Robert Watson, 19; Sherry White, 30; Elizabeth Woods, 43; Dahnis Wright, 25; and a 17-year-old male youth.

Danielle Hodson, 23, is also wanted on an outstanding warrant for breach of recognizance.

-- -- --

A HIGH FROM CRACK COCAINE IS DIFFERENT FROM MARIJUANA

- For about $40, addicts can get one quarter grams of crack.

- The high lasts an hour at most.

- Users come out of the high feeling paranoid and a strong urge to use again.

- For $10, users can get one gram of marijuana.

- Depending on its potency, the high lasts between two and five hours.

- Users come out of the high feeling mellow and tired.

-- -- --

FACTS ABOUT CRACK

- It's one of the most addictive drugs available on the street.

- Crack cocaine comes from powder cocaine.

- It's made using a mixture of cocaine, baking soda and water.

- The solution is boiled and a solid substance separates from the boiling mixture.

- The solid substance, crack cocaine, is removed and dried.

- It's then broken or cut into "rocks," each weighing between one-tenth and one-half a gram.

- Users put a piece of crack in a pipe, most of which are homemade, light it and smoke it.

- Crack got its name because when you smoke it, it makes a cracking sound.

- Smoking crack is what makes it so addictive since the high is instantaneous.

2003-06-21



by Kelly Pedro
London Free Press
RAIDED: Police take a woman out of the Rendezvous Tavern in handcuffs. Several men and women were arrested June 12 in the Dundas and Ontario streets area during a major raid targeted at crack cocaine. — LONDON FREE PRESS/ Mike Hensen


 



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