Showing posts with label Drugs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drugs. Show all posts

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Three People Arrested, Heroin and Cocaine Seized

Suffolk County Police today arrested three people on drug related charges after seizing heroin and cocaine at their home in Copiague.

First Squad detectives, First Precinct Community Oriented Police Enforcement (COPE) officers, Emergency Service officers and Canine officers executed a search warrant at 13 39th St. in Copiague at 6:35 a.m. Detectives seized more than 100 packs of heroin, 1/4 once of cocaine along with more than $3,000 in cash.

Arrested were:
·Richard Beltre, 19, of 13 39th Street, Copiague, who was charged with one count of Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance 3rd Degree and two counts of Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance 4th Degree.

·Stephanie Filippone, 21, of 13 39th Street, Copiague, who was charged with one count of Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance 3rd Degree, two counts of Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance 4th Degree and three counts of Criminal Sale of a Controlled Substance 3rd Degree.

·Leoncio Beltre, 50, 13 39th Street, Copiague, who was charged with one count of Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance 3rd Degree.

The Suffolk County Police Narcotics Section assisted in this investigation. All three suspects will be held overnight for their arraignment tomorrow at First District Court in Central Islip.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

E-cigarette sparks attention as FDA crackdown looms

By Ken Mclaughlin

San Jose Mercury News

(MCT)

SAN JOSE, Calif. _ The young man in the tall swivel chair at the mall seems lost in nicotine nirvana as he takes a deep drag on a cigarette and blows smoke rings to the surprise of passing shoppers.

Sarah Kruberg, a 21-year-old college student from Portola Valley, Calif., does a double take but keeps walking.

"I knew it couldn't be someone smoking a cigarette," she said with a laugh. "But I didn't know what it was."

What Kruberg saw at Westfield Valley Fair mall in Santa Clara, Calif., was a kiosk salesman puffing away on an electronic cigarette, a new product that Jose Canseco, the steroid-tainted baseball slugger turned e-cigarette pitchman, predicts will "revolutionize the industry of smoking."

Health officials worldwide, however, are casting a wary eye.

Last summer a Florida company began aggressively marketing e-cigarettes _ which emit a nicotine vapor with the help of a computer chip _ but the U.S. Food and Drug Administration now seems poised to pull e-cigs from the market because the agency considers them "new drugs." That means they need approval from the FDA, which requires companies to back up their claims with scientific data.

"It is illegal to sell or market them, and the FDA is looking into this," said Rita Chappelle, an agency spokeswoman.

Asked if that meant the FDA would crack down on the dozens of mall kiosks nationwide where the product is being sold like perfume and cellphone covers, Chappelle said: "This is an open case. Beyond that I cannot comment."

Informed of the FDA's position, David Burke, general manager at Westfield Valley Fair, said Monday that the shopping center is looking into the legality of the product. "All our retailers are required to comply with applicable federal, state and local laws and regulations," he said.

Invented in China several years ago, the e-cig not only "smokes" like a cigarette. It also looks like a cigarette, feels like a cigarette, glows like a cigarette and contains nicotine like a cigarette.

But it's not a cigarette. It's a slender stainless-steel tube.

When someone puffs on an e-cigarette, a computer-aided sensor activates a heating element that vaporizes a solution _ usually containing nicotine _ in the mouthpiece. The resulting mist _ which comes in flavors such as chocolate and cherry _ can be inhaled. A light-emitting diode on the tip of the e-cigarette simulates the glow of burning tobacco. The device is powered by a rechargable lithium battery.

Its boosters say it's the perfect way to quit smoking because the nicotine mist contains no tar or any of the host of cancer-causing agents of tobacco smoke _ yet has the touch and feel of smoking. That, they say, makes the e-cigarette superior to other nicotine-delivery systems such as patches, chewing gum, aerosol sprays and inhalers.

The levels of nicotine can be adjusted, from "high" to no nicotine at all. That, e-cig supporters say, allows smokers to wean themselves from nicotine, which most doctors say is highly addictive but not, as far as they know, a carcinogen.

The product's aficionados say that because it contains no tobacco, it can be used in bars, nightclubs, restaurants and other public places where states and localities have banned tobacco use.

But anti-smoking groups say that's exactly the problem. They fear that it will reintroduce a "smoking culture" into places where people no longer are used to seeing wisps of smoke and cigarettes hanging from people's mouths.

"I understand why people use the nicotine replacement aids," said Serena Chen, regional tobacco policy director of the American Lung Association in California. "But I don't understand why people want to pretend that they're smoking."

Chen believes that many ex-smokers will conclude that the e-cigarette is harmless and be lured back into the smoking trap.

"If you had a serial killer who liked to stab people, would you give him a rubber knife?" asked Chen. "This just boggles the mind."

Executives at Smoking Everywhere, the Sunrise, Fla., firm that is marketing the product on the Internet and in mall kiosks, say criticism of the e-cigarette is irrational.

"The mist is mostly water. It has to be better for you than smoking," said Eitan Peer, vice president of the company. "It's been approved by doctors. We've been on Fox News. We've been on the 'Howard Stern Show.' Our spokesmen are Jose Canseco and Danny Bonaduce."

Company officials say the other main ingredient in the e-cig is propylene glycol, which is used in everything from Hollywood smoke machines to food colorings to hydraulic fluids.

Peer said the suggested retail price of the Chinese-made e-cig is $149, but because the kiosk operators are independent vendors, the price varies.

The other day, Dan Conroy picked up his e-cigarette "starter kit" from one of the two Smoking Everywhere kiosks at Valley Fair for $140, plus tax.

"It's the first time I've seen the product," said Conroy, 37, a Sacramento, Calif., contractor. "But I'm interested in quitting, and this has to be healthier than tobacco."

He and several other smokers interviewed at the mall agreed that e-smoke isn't as satisfying or rich as tobacco smoke. But they all said they thought they could get used to it.

"It tastes pretty good," said Oliver De La Cruz, 29, of Daly City, Calif., whose wife, Kristine, was about to give birth to their first child. She encouraged him to try the e-cig, saying it would be a wonderful present to their newborn if Daddy would quit smoking.

But both De La Cruz and one nicotine-addicted friend, 23-year-old Marco Maneru of Daly City, said they wanted to do some research on the e-cigarette before they buy one.

"Who knows?" Maneru said. "There could be some chemicals in there that are really bad for you."

___

© 2009, San Jose Mercury News (San Jose, Calif.).

Visit MercuryNews.com, the World Wide Web site of the Mercury News, at http://www.mercurynews.com.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Friday, March 13, 2009

Teen hands out thousands of dollars after finding drug money

By Joy Powell
Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
(MCT)

MINNEAPOLIS _ It's believed to have been $18,000 in drug loot that a 16-year-old found along a bicycle trail in Farmington, Minn., this week, and then took home _ for the night, at least.

"By morning, he shared his fortune with everybody," or so it seemed, said Dawana Witt, a Dakota County sheriff's deputy who cracked the case.

The teen gave away fistfuls of hundred-dollar bills, which soon showed up in four south metro schools Tuesday.

By day's end, Witt and three fellow school resource officers had snapped up about $11,000 the boy gave away. Investigators ended up recovering $18,000 _ nearly all the cash the boy found and either kept or gave away, Witt said.

The case began with the teen's discovery as he pedaled his bike near Pilot Knob Road and 195th Street after school Monday.

Investigators suspect not long before that, a marijuana dealer, who feared he was being tailed, had tossed the loot out a car window _ along with several pounds of high-grade marijuana and scales, said Chief Deputy Dave Bellows of the Sheriff's Office.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

"We're confident that both the money and marijuana wound up in the ditch at the same time," Bellows said.

It's understandable why the boy missed the pot, he said.

"It's a weedy area. This kid goes down, opens up the bag and sees a large quantity of cash," Bellows said. "I don't think he's looking for anything else."

On Tuesday morning, Witt fielded a call from a supervisor of Marschall Line Inc., a Farmington bus company serving the alternative school the boy attends, Alliance Education Center in Rosemount. Students attend that school part-time, while also enrolled at other high schools or Dakota County Technical College.

A bus aide reported the teen had asked her early Tuesday whether she could accept gifts. She told him no, but after he exited the bus, she found $1,200 in her bag, Witt said. The aide told Witt the teen apparently also gave cash to a classmate on the bus.

Witt interviewed the aide, and then the teen with the loot. He first said the cash was from his allowance before telling the truth. Witt asked him why he gave cash to the bus aide.

"She has a kid and she needs the money," the teen replied.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

The teen led skeptical Dakota County authorities to the ditch where he found the money, and there, they spotted 4 pounds of marijuana and the scales.

Witt and Bellows said they expect no charges against the teen for not turning in the cash, though state law requires anyone who finds anything of value to make reasonable attempts to return it to its owner.

"This kid, he has a good heart, he really does," Witt said. "He just made a bad decision. I don't think he had any bad intentions."

Finding thousands of dollars presented an exciting, though misguided, opportunity for a kid who likes to give, she said.

"All I've got to say," said Witt, "is that he was very happy for about 24 hours."

___

© 2009, Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Visit the Star Tribune Web edition on the World Wide Web at http://www.startribune.com

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Parent University to Address Drug Concerns

“Drugs in our Town: What’s a Parent to Do?” will be the theme of Smithtown School District’s Parent University on Monday, March 9 at 7:30 p.m. at Nesaquake Middle School, 479 Edgewood Avenue, St. James, NY.

The topic of the evening was selected in response to the district’s Drug Summit held on December 17, where school and community members pledged a proactive approach to the community’s drug problem. The presentation will feature information and advice from experts, including a physician, law enforcement official, health educator, drug counselor, principal, and a parent struggling with her child’s drug addiction.

The evening is a cooperative effort between the District’s PTA leadership and administration. Topics are inspired by concerns expressed by the district’s parents. This is the third district-wide Parent University. Smithtown’s first district-wide Parent University was held in April 2008 and attracted 300 people.

All are welcome to attend and are encouraged to save the date.

TheMatadorOnline.com conducted an exclusive video interview with Ed Ehmann, the Superintendent of the Smithtown Central School District, last week. The video will be available on our Web site later in the week.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Smithtown Drug Store Robbery


Suffolk County Fourth Squad Detectives and Crime Stoppers are trying to identify a subject who robbed a local drug store earlier this month.

On Sunday, December 7, 2008 at approximately 12:55 PM the suspect entered Maple Pharmacy, 310 Maple Avenue, Smithtown and announced a robbery. The lone male demanded narcotic drugs and threatened violence if his demands were not met. The suspect is described as a white male, approximately 20 years of age, 5’10”, medium build wearing a red zip-up sweatshirt with a hood, a dark winter hat which he pulled over his face and dark pants and sneakers. He fled with bottles of oxycotin and alprazalam.

Anyone with information about this crime is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-220-TIPS. All calls will be kept confidential and the caller will be eligible for a cash reward of up to $5000.00 for information that leads to an arrest.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

10,000 Packets of Heroin Seized in Smithtown Drug Bust

Suffolk County Police have arrested a Smithtown man and seized approximately 10,000 packets of heroin, more than one kilogram of cocaine, more than 100 oxycodone pills and almost one pound of marijuana from his residence.

In response to community complaints of drug activity, Fourth Squad Narcotics Enforcement/Special Operations Team (NE/SOT) detectives initiated surveillances and observed two men acting suspiciously at the Islandia Shopping Center in Islandia on November 18. An investigation revealed that the men were at the location to engage in a drug transaction. Christopher Loeb, 22, and Anthony Salerno, 25, were arrested and transported to the Fourth Precinct.

At approximately 9 p.m., detectives executed a search warrant at Salerno’s home, located at 152 Brooksite Drive, Smithtown, and seized approximately $125,000 in cash in addition to the quantity of drugs. The seized drugs had an approximate street value of $250,000.

Salerno was charged with two counts of Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance 1st Degree, three counts of Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance 3rd Degree, Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance 4th Degree, Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance 5th Degree, Criminal Possession of Marijuana 3rd Degree and Criminal Use of Drug Paraphernalia 2nd Degree. Salerno was arraigned at First District Court in Central Islip on November 19.

Loeb, of 205 Landing Ave., Smithtown, was charged with Loitering 1st Degree and Criminal Possession of a Hypodermic Instrument. He was released on a desk appearance ticket.

The investigation is continuing.