In the Squad Room - The Heroin Highway

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Squad Room

Weekly Deployment Meeting Highlights

Every week, Linda Hansen attends the Evanston Police Department’s Deployment Meetings, takes notes on various topics and writes about other police-related matters of interest to ordinary citizens like her. 


In the Squad Room - The Heroin Highway

Heroin

Police departments throughout the country have been alerted to the widespread availability of cheap, potent heroin as the nation’s new designer drug.  Thank the Mexican drug cartels. Some experts believe it’s the worst heroin epidemic in American history, with product quality so good it can be snorted rather than liquefied and injected.  Heroin is now a standard menu item for many neighborhood drug dealers.  These factors have all led to a striking uptick in heroin-related ODs and deaths, doubling and tripling them in some communities.  The good news is that Evanston has not seen it. There have been isolated cases of heroin use and dealing and that of course is investigated by our NET unit. 

Local news crews have documented suburban teens traveling I-290 (the Eisenhower Expressway now dubbed The Heroin Highway) to pick up cheap packets of four-times-more-potent packets of heroin in K-Town, a 12-block area on Chicago’s West Side. Videos show a veritable drive-thru of drug activity.  Some suburban police departments – Mount Prospect’s, for one - have been trained and equipped with Naxolone, a life-saving injectable to counteract the effects of heroin and opioid overdoses.  In one Massachusetts community, the use of the drug by first-responding police officers reduced the death toll of overdoses from 90 residents to 9 in an 18-month period.

Anyone at risk needs to understand that snorting heroin is just as addictive as shooting it.  It’s also just as deadly.  Explain this to your teenagers and those young adults who may still be living at home. Suburbs to the west and northwest of are reporting spikes in heroin-related offenses and deaths that Evanston hasn’t experienced. 


Deployment Meeting – Wednesday, September 3, 2014


Prior to This Week

The Crime Analyst reminded us (and now I’m reminding you) that unlocked garage doors and unsecured bicycles continue to lead to theft.  There were five garage burglaries throughout the city.  There were a total of 11 bicycle thefts – only one bike was secured.  The rest were either unsecured or left in unlocked garages or common areas.  Citizens also continue to leave mobile devices in unlocked vehicles. 

  • There were two Man With a Gun calls during the period: the first on 8/28 on the 1900 block of Jackson and the second on 8/31 on the 200 block of Dewey.  Witnesses to the second incident are not cooperating.
  • Between 8/29 and 8/30, vandals scratched and spray-painted nine vehicles parked on the 1100 block of Leonard.  The next day, 9/1, a vehicle on the 1800 block of Lyons was hit with a brick.
  • Across Howard on 8/31: Two men were shot on the 7400 block of Ridge in Chicago. One victim, 29 years of age, was pronounced dead at Presence St. Francis Hospital and the other, also 29, survived the shooting and was taken to Advocate Illinois Masonic Medical Center where his condition was stabilized.The shootings are thought to be gang-related.
  • On 9/2, a female victim suffered a broken rib and other injuries in an incident involving a known offender, subsequently arrested by the EPD.
  • PST, traffic and patrol officers continued a second week of meet-and-greets with student and parents at Evanston’s public and private schools.  The officers were also there to educate both groups on school zone safety. EPD presence was favorably viewed by all, but drivers may feel differently next week when school zone violations result in consequences.
  • On 9/2, EPD’s special operations group executed a search warrant for a drug-related investigation and arrested Devon Matthews, 20, of Skokie for cannabis possession and the possession of a TEC-22 firearm.  He was charged with two misdemeanors and felonies.
  • The “Drive Sober of Get Pulled Over” campaign results in 33 seat belt violations, 29 speeding tickets, 12 cell phone violations and 47 other miscellaneous traffic citations.  And no DUIs.
  • On Thursday, 9/4 members of EPDs investigative services division teamed up with parole agents from the Illinois Department of Corrections for checking on parolees. As a result, 16 were checked and one was arrested for possession of a controlled substance. Look for his name in the daily crime bulletin, Dametrae Irby. 

Looking Ahead 

  • In the next few weeks, PST officers will be visiting 22 houses of worship in the Fifth Ward to talk to clergy and parishioner about community concerns and how police and citizens can join forces to work together.
  • 39,000 spectators are expected to attend Northwestern’s football game on 9/6.  EPD officers will be on hand.
  • Wildkit fans rejoice: It’s Friday night lights at ETHS when the Wildkits take on Crete-Monee, starting at 7:30PM.  Yes, the EPD will be there, too.
  • They’re back: Northwestern student will be moving in during the next week or so. Northwestern Police will be working with the EPD to monitor safety and security during the off-campus move-ins.
  • The free Streets Alive! event that will close down Main Street from Dodge to Hinman Avenues is scheduled for Sunday, 9/7 from 1 to 6 PM.  The mile of music, food, activities and open space “gives Evanston community members and opportunity to experience our public streets like never before,” according to Mayor Elizabeth Tisdahl.


Inquiring Minds - What additional tools are available to keep citizens informed of crimes in their neighborhoods?

crime reports

Here’s an interactive one. EPD partners with CrimeReports.com, the largest, most comprehensive crime-mapping website in the world.  Evanston residents and businesses can enter an address and get a map view of the hundred block where the crime occurred (for example, the 800 block of Madison), the type of crime, the date and time of occurrence.  The site also displays specific address information on registered sex offenders. 

CrimeReports.com posts accurate, official crime information for communities across North America, so if you’re keeping an eye on Uncle Marty’s condo community in Florida, you may be able to check on it if that community is sharing data with the company. It isn’t as up-to-date as our Daily Crime Bulletin since there’s a download delay of 24 to 72 hours, but it has some nifty features.  For example, you can use it on your iPhone or iPad device with a free app through Apple and there’s even a link to submit a tip (in three languages) for specific reported crimes. 

Other communication tools being used by the Evanston Police Department are Facebook, Text-a-Tip (tips also can be submitted anonymously online for previously committed crimes and by phone), plus a new Twitter account,@EvanstonPD. For more information, please call 3-1-1 (847-448-4311) or Police non-emergency at 847-866-5000. 


311

The ON-GOING GUN BUYBACK PROGRAM allows Evanston residents to turn in an operational firearm to police at any time in exchange for $100. Residents can utilize this service by calling 311 or the Evanston Police Department non-emergency line at 847-866-5000. A police officer will pick up the unwanted firearm at the residents’ address and present the resident with a voucher that can be exchanged for $100 at the city collector’s office located in the Morton Civic Center, 2100 Ridge Ave.

Firearms should not be handled or brought to the police department. An officer will call the resident after a request is made for the officer to come to a person's residence and retrieve the firearm.


Crime Reports

What would you like to know about what the Evanston Police Department is doing to fight crime? Let us know if you have specific questions or concerns about issues in your neighborhood. Submissions are always welcome at police@cityofevanston.org or by calling the community strategies bureau at (847) 866-5019.  

If you’d like to receive Evanston’s Daily Crime Report by email, you can subscribe here or view the Monthly Crime Statistics that are reported on a yearly basis to the FBI by clicking here


CPA

The Fall 12-week Citizen Police Academy just started this week. If you’d like to learn more about the Evanston Police Department, take an active role in Community Oriented Policing and join the ranks of 800 graduates since 1995, please visit www.cityofevanston.org/cpa and plan ahead to enroll in the Spring 2015 class. There is no cost to anyone who lives or works in Evanston.


The weekly deployment report is an informational bulletin prepared by a community member that keeps citizens informed about what police do on a weekly basis. Information contained in this report is not to be considered as a media/press release. Any information considered by a media source from this bulletin needs to be verified by an official from the department. This can be done by contacting the media line at 847-866-5026.