Black Flag 215 index
BENT FOR THE CAUSE-COPS AND COCAINE
In Black Flag issue 212,in an article "Scotland Yardies" we argued
that "police strategy is in reality about the confinement of crime
within working class areas" and that "whether for political purposes
or private gain, some police are actively involved in the drug trade
in inner cities.". This article attempts to further substantiate
that contention.
At the 1998 Labour Party Conference Prime Minister Tony Blair
announced he would extend his experiments with zero tolerance
policing to 25 "crime hot spots" throughout the UK. The government
intends to spend £250 million on "crime" over the next 3 years. For
those of a liberal temperament, who flinch at the idea of mimicking
the law and order policies of right wing US Republicans, Blair has
coined the phrase "order maintenance" -which, conveniently happens
to sum up the real aim of the policy pretty nicely.
What "order maintenance" means, we are told, is saturation policing
of high crime areas, with Operation Welwyn-the police targeting
operation in Kings Cross-cited as an example. By the Home Office's
admission, this isn't really a strategy to cut crime. The July
report "Reducing Offending" confirms that "there are large question
marks-over the ability of the police to distinguish between firm and
harsh policing styles, and over the long term effect of arresting
many more people for relatively minor offences. Police tactics in
some implementations of zero tolerance have been described as over
zealous and this can lead to poor police community relations."
One example of such poor relations could be Cleveland, stomping
ground of Blair, currently suspended "super cop" Ray Mallon. Members
of the local police authority have described Mallon's policing as
"close to the line", with aggressive use of CS sprays (Cleveland is
the smallest force in the country. In 1997 it used CS 600 times-the
highest in any constabulary area), high profile arrests with TV
crews in attendance' allegations of prisoners being offered heroin
in return for confessions, and local solicitors complaining of
erosion of civil liberties.
Bizarrely we are told that one result of the crackdown on crime will
be that the police will no longer respond to every call from the
public and "the day an officer visits the scene of every burglary
may be long gone." (The Guardian 29/9/98). Or perhaps it's not so
bizarre. What "order maintenance" really means is the use of
aggressive policing and environmental aids like CTV and police
surveillance helicopters to keep the animals in their cages-to
physically contain crime within working class areas (euphemistically
referred to as high crime areas) so that middle class voters can
feel safe in their beds. Poverty causes crime, and as Labour have no
intention of tackling poverty they've put their jackboots on to
cordon off crime.
Within working class areas, it will be business as usual. And
business is precisely what goes down.
The Sunday Times on 20/9/98,reported the allegations of Duncan
Maclaughlin, a detective of 18 years standing, who spent 5 years in
the drug squad and 5 years in the London based regional crime squad.
MacLaughlin records his experiences in the regional crime squad as
follows, "You put all the clever ones, all the brains, in one
office, and you got the cleverest scams. There were no better
criminals in the country...I was a member of the most professional
criminal cartel that Britain has ever produced. If we got anonymous
information that there was going to be a coke deal involving, say,
25 kilos of coke, straightaway you would create an imaginary
informant. Then a friend would come in and sign a bit of paper and
maybe receive up to £40,000 reward money. Drugs were recycled all
the time. If you found 15 kilos of coke, you produced 12 kilos and 3
would be sold. A kilo of coke you get £30,000 for, so you have made
£90,000." Scotland Yard have tried to smear MacLaughlin as an
oddball, but the shit won't stick because MacLaughlin's story fits
in too well with other reports of police involvement with drug
distribution.
When Tommy Adams was jailed recently for cannabis importation some
of the press intimated that earlier cases against the Adams firm had
collapsed because officers in the pay of the Adamses has tipped them
off in advance. In 1996 John Donald, a detective of 15 years
standing, was jailed for his involvement with Kevin Cressey. . In
September 1992,Cressey and another man, the son of a well known
south London villain, were arrested in Streatham on a drugs charge,
Donald stitched up bail for Cressey for £18,000 and took £1,000 for
giving him his collator file-details of police intelligence. Donald
also agreed, for £40,000 to arrange a "burglary" to lose Cressey's
files. Donald also offered to sell information to Kenneth Noye and
sold information on Operation Circus, a targeting operation, to
Noye's associate Michael Lawson.
Ronald Palumbo, a Met officer at Stoke Newington police station was
jailed for 10 years in 1997 for his involvement in a conspiracy to
import cannabis worth over £2 million. Palumbo acted as a courier
during the importation of cannabis from Spain. Palumbo was also
involved in the false conviction of a housing worker, Rennie
Kingsley, and 13 other defendants who had their convictions quashed
at the Court of Appeal following revelations of fabrication of
evidence by Palumbo.
Over 30 Flying Squad officers are currently under investigation
following statements made by two of their colleagues who were
arrested and charged with conspiring to supply cannabis worth
£50,000.In November 1996 the Observer revealed the existence of at
least 6 other major enquiries into police corruption in the South
East.
*Operation Gallery-into alleged leaks from the Regional Crime Squad
to major figures in organised crime.
*Operation Gallery Part Two-into allegations of extortion by Crime
Squad officers over reward money for informants
*The Harrods inquiry-into allegations that Crime Squad officers
deposited thousands of pounds in three of the store's safe deposit
boxes
*An inquiry into allegations of rape and theft of confiscated drugs
*An inquiry into sensitive leaks from the Criminal Records Office
*An inquiry into "allegations made against a senior police officer".
None of this is new. In 1996 Frank Williamson, the police officer
who led a major investigation into corruption in the Metropolitan
police in the 1970s, revealed that he was obstructed by the force's
then commissioner who knowingly had assigned a corrupt officer Ron
Moody as his assistant, and was ostracised by senior officers. At
the end of his investigation three officers were charged. Williamson
told Duncan Campbell of the Guardian there could have been charges
laid against 10 times as many. (Guardian 22/1/96) He stated that the
CID at the Met contained "not a rotten apple but a barrel of rotten
apples," He believes that endemic corruption was a main reason why
organised crime flourished in the 1960s. "Without it, the Krays
would never have got off the side of the pavement in Bethnal Green."
In 1977,the No.5 Regional Crime Squad made an arrest in Romford, and
found drugs which came from a 1,200lb haul seized the previous year,
which had been recorded as having been destroyed. An arrested market
trader, John Goss, reported that he had been pressured into selling
the gear by serving police officers. Investigations showed that
drugs sent for burning had been removed from their bags before
destruction and another substance substituted. The list goes on....
(The list would be even longer were it not for the sharp practices
of the Police Federation, who threaten libel actions against any
journalist who starts to sniff around rumours of police corruption.)
In coining his theory of "due process", the American sociologist
Herbert Packer more or less gave the game away. Society (i.e. the
New Labour voting middle classes) doesn't mind too much who gets
punished as long as someone does. If too many wrong people are
processed and enough fuss is made about it, then the state becomes
undermined. "Law and order" means making the middle classes feel
safe because the undeserving and ungrateful poor are locked down.
Within working class areas, the police and their criminal
co-conspirators just line up to screw us like all the rest. As the
US anti drugs activist Clarence Lusane puts it, "The proliferation
of hard drug use in these communities plays the dual role of social
control and economic delusion. A drugged out community, pacified,
subdued, and bent on self-destruction, is not going to rise up
against the white corporate power structure. The youth of these
communities, who are most likely to rebel, are at the centre of the
drug epidemic, and the government sponsored drug war". Law and order
is a game, and, more importantly, it is a game played at our
expense.
The extent to which this is the case is made clear in a new book
"White Out" by Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St.Clair (Verso). The
book is concerned with instances of CIA complicity in international
narcotics, but the issues it raises parallel those raised here.
In August 1996 the San Jose Mercury News ran a series of articles by
Gary Webb, entitled "Dark Alliance- The Story Behind the Crack
Explosion". Webb's story was simple. A group of Nicaraguan exiles
set up a cocaine ring in California, establishing ties with the
black street gangs of South Central Los Angeles who manufactured
crack out of shipments of powder cocaine. Webb charts how profits
made by the Nicaraguan exiles were funnelled back to the Nicaraguan
Contras. The drug ring was headed by a Nicaraguan exile, Norwin
Meneses Cantarero ,who served as head of security and intelligence
for the leading organisation in the Contra coalition, the Fuerza
Democratico Nicaraguense. The US Drug Enforcement Agency had files
going back to 1974 on Meneses, yet he was granted political refugee
status in July 1979,when he and other members of the Nicaraguan
elite fled to the US. Evidence exists that the Meneses ring moved
900 kilos of cocaine in 1981 alone. During the period of Meneses'
operation he and his accomplices were protected by the CIA from
prosecution.
As Cockburn and St Clair argue, the existence of the drug ring is
not the only issue here. Was it true that cocaine prices set by the
Nicaraguans rendered the drug affordable to poor people for the
first time? Arguably, this was the case....As Ricky Ross (the ring's
main street dealer) told Webb, the prices offered...gave him command
of the Los Angeles market. "It was unreal Ross remembered, "We were
just wiping everyone out." His connections to the Bloods and Crips
street gangs solved the distribution problems...By 1983, Ross-now
known as "Freeway Ricky"-was buying over 100 kilos of cocaine a week
and selling as much as $3 million worth of crack a day."
Webb's story is substantiated by witness statements, FBI documents,
DEA reports and federal grand jury transcripts. Nevertheless, Webb
was targeted by a smear campaign designed to deflect attention from
the issues thrown up by his story.
Maxine Waters, the Congress Representative for South Central Los
Angeles, seized on Webb's story. She was also attacked by the
mainstream press. Waters felt she had no option but to fight on the
issues raised by Webb's reports." In South Central we wondered where
the guns were coming from. They were not simply handguns, they were
Uzis and AK-47s,sophisticated weapons brought n by the same CIA
operatives who were selling the cocaine because they had to enforce
bringing the profits back in. It was at about this time that you saw
all these guns coming into the community, that you saw more and more
killing, more and more violence. Now we know what was going on. he
drugs were put in our communities on consignment, out to the gangs
and others. he killings just mounted and people said "what are they
fighting about ? What are these drive by shootings about? What is
this gang warfare? And the press said "oh, it's the colors. Some
like red, some like blue. Well, you know, It was about the drugs, it
was about crack cocaine, introduced into our communities by people
who brought it in with a purpose."
Cockburn and St Clair set out further indictments detailing CIA
involvement in narcotic trafficking in Bolivia, Columbia, and
Afghanistan,. In every case, the US's "anti communist" friends made
billions." "The Medellin cartel alone racked up $10 billion a year
in sales, prompting Forbes magazine to put two of its leaders-Pablo
Escobar and Jorge Ochoa-on its list of the world's richest men in
1988.At the other end of the line from this affluence were the
crackheads of South Central and other inner cities."
The scale of activities revealed by Cockburn and St Clair has no
comparison in the UK, to our knowledge. It is nevertheless the case
that cartels subject to CIA protection and trafficking with CIA
complicity (particularly with regard to Afghan heroin and Medellin
cocaine) also exported to the UK . Heroin hit Liverpool at rock
bottom price immediately after the 1981 riots there. Scotland Yard's
involvement with Yardie informers (Black Flag 212) suggests police
involvement with crack cocaine. n a sense, there is no need to graft
a conspiracy theory onto all the documented evidence of police
involvement with drug distribution. If the purpose of law and order
is really "order maintenance" -the containment and pacification of
working class communities-then re-dealing crack and over use of CS
gas are all part of the same process. As Cockburn and St Clair put
it, "Drug war" is a code phrase for social control and repression.
They're not bent, guv, they're just doing their job.