A sports writer based in Hoquiam, Wash. is stuck without an outlet to release his spleen on anything and everything. Life is full of upper-class twits and they need to be dealt with... Lemon Curry?
A first hand view on the drug trade...
Published on November 5, 2003 By rvrfhsiahskfhghia In Misc
I'm a new home owner. I moved into my new home with my new wife just about two months ago. Although there was a time crunch in getting the house, there's very little wrong with it, especially since it is 104 years old. It is a little hard to keep warm on these cold days but we're working on it.
Across the street from my front door is a two-car garage, which is old and in bad shape. The house that it is a part of, but not attached to, is a very nice old-style home with a very nice grandmother living there with her family. It is a good neighborhood, but...
There is a problem.
I believe that the two-car garage, just across the street from my front door, is being used by drug dealers to sell their items of choice.
Tell-tale signs: Three locks on the doors, blankets obscure your view into the garage, people go in and out of it at all hours of the day and night, lights on inside like people are living inside of it, cars of all types park in front of it and my house with people who appear to be strung out or in need of a fix walking into the garage and leaving a few minutes later. Others stay there for hours, then stagger into their cars and drive off. Extension cords go from the second-story window across to the garage. People will drive up, get out, see that the garage is locked, look up into that same second-story window, the guy comes out, opens it, then minutes later, they come out, he goes back into the house and the others leave in their car.
The first day we start moving in our stuff, there was a crowd of five or six people in front of the garage. I get out of the car, open the front door and take a few boxes inside. I step back out and wave hi! They all looked at me, then scattered into the garage like I was the kitchen light and they were cockroaches.
That night, one of their friends stayed in his car for many hours as cars pulled up alongside of it for a minute or two, then drive off. The car is parked in front of my house. I call the cops. They drive by, but don't do anything.
The next day, the police tell me that my street is a major drug boulevard, with a known drug dealer living just up the street. All they can do is give me a drug tip line to call. "We don't have the resources to do anything right now..." was repeated to me when I ask if they know that a drug dealer is there, why don't they just get him.
The park-n-go hasn't occured since we've moved in, but the traffic into and out of the garage is still there. When I get home at night, the lights are on inside and, sometimes someone sticks their head out to see who it is.
The drug tip line people are nice, but I call them all of the time with license plate numbers and what they are doing. One time, the woman said, "If the person we believe is there in that garage is who he is, then you have plenty to worry about..."
Nice.
I call the tip line, I call the cops, They roll by, They continue to do what they do in there.
Am I going nuts? Am I blowing this out of proportion? I don't think so.
Is this normal? Did I just draw the short straw? Maybe and yes...
I moved from California to get away from the drugs and the elements that are around the illegal stuff that is out there. I've lived in big cities, small towns, rural areas, urban sprawl. Somewhere, sometime in all of those moves and new addresses, there was something going on that was drug-related.
Now, after living several years (supposedly) away from the crap, I have it in front of me daily.
Wonderful... I just wish that I went into the Army, got trained in Special Ops and was good at espionage. That way, I could find out if they are doing that crap there. Then, maybe then, I'd have a little piece of mind.
But for now, I have a big worry that is just outside my front door.
Comments
on Nov 05, 2003
That's a really crappy thing to have happen just across the street. Have you thought about moving? (I know that you just moved in, but if it is a safety concern). I'm pretty sure that I could not live like that. I live out in the country among farmers that have mean dogs and guns to keep people honest. There is basically no crime what-so-ever. I have to drive 50 miles each way to work, but when I get home, I feel safe on my private 2 acres in the country. Every place has issues, and every place has some sort of crime. But, when you are in contact with desperate people on a daily basis, you are more likely to have some sort of crime happen to you. The whole "police" system is a joke. They are supposed to "protect and serve" but what they really do is "hassle and clean up messes". They never seem to protect anyone. The smaller towns are better because they are more manageable, but most of the larger cities are just out of control.
on Nov 05, 2003
You know, there's a lot of value in psychological operations. Of course, that's assuming that the enemy actually has a functioning mind that you can put into a paranoid state yourself, and therefore, have control over.

Paranoid drug dears, however, will not really fall into good psyOps material. In which case, no, you don't want to sit on the porch cleaning your guns.

Of course, there is also a lot to be said for black ops. No, not wet ops, but black ops. Very quiet, very sneaky, always leaves something that is a double take situation that messes with your mind. Perhaps it's time to watch for dead silence and quiet and no movement, no lights, and put up some lawn gnomes or pink flamingos right in front of the garage door. Every chance you get, you put one up.

Of course, you will want to do special things to the flamingos and gnomes. Signage is always a good thing. Such as "Buy your crack here"... then you quietly call the police and tell them that the folks are advertising now. And that it's a neighborhood blight. *evil grin* That's another one - if the garage is in really bad shape (or if you can find a way to help it along to being in really bad shape) then you should call the city and report an unsafe living condition, because it's clear to you that someone is living in that structure... and oh wait, that might also be a code violation too.... *bigger evil grin*

Adding lime green polka dots to the flamingos is also perfectly acceptable. *whistles innocently as she walks away*
on Nov 05, 2003
Just as long as whatever, if anything, you chose to do, doesn't wind up getting you shot... It does, however, make you have to rethink your analysis of whether or not it's a 'good neighbourhood' or not.

IF that is even happening over there (Not that I can think of anything else it would be.) Do you have a video camera? Video evidence might be your friend - that's how an old friend of mine got rid of the drug dealer who bought the house across the street from him. He kept shooting 24/7 (camera had a night filter on it,) and eventually got something on tape that he was able to use to get rid of him.

Unfortuntately calling the police with "I think there's something going on across the street." doesn't seem to do much of anything anymore. However, the tip my uncle gave me (and he's a police officer) is to file a noise complaint. That gets cops out of the car at least - but it depends on the skills and talents of the police officer if they notice anything about the people or what might be going on when they get to the door (IF there's anything going on at all.)

You can call for more serious things (Heard loud fighting, loud noises like something might be happening, etc.) but then, you risk putting yourself in bad trouble, so, well, don't.
on Nov 05, 2003
I like the flamingos idea, but the trick is finding them around here... But then, they're always home. The guy doesn't work.
The noise complaint is a good idea as well, since they can be noisy at times.
As for my safety, there are advantages to working for a newspaper... No one wants to piss me off in fear that I'd write about them in the paper. Also, the cops are listening to me (at least that is what I think they are doing) and the cops reporter is asking about my neighborhood to the chief as well.
Karma — the only deterrant to moving (A 30-year mortgage...)
Now, where can I find those flammingos....
on Nov 05, 2003
http://www.flamingomania.com

You can buy anything under the sun that's flamingo related on that site.
on Nov 08, 2003
Sounds like you are dealing with a meth dealer. If that is the case leave this people alone. Why well if it was crack heads they might think about how much you are watching them and might be calling the cops for about 5 minutes at a time. Then they will start thinking about that next hit off the pipe. Pot heads will be talking about something or just sitting and stareing for hours. But with meth users that line, hit or shot will last for hours or days and make them feel like supermen and they will spend that time thinking about getting even with you. And if you are wondering how you can tell if there are if it is mostly white people then it is meth. If you more that one race of people more that likely crack. If it is a lot of younger people most likely pot which I wouldn't worry to much about as they will be more afraid of you that you are of them. But if it it meth head just leave it to the cops or you could end up with holes in you tires or worst. I do like the Video idea. Or why not talk to that grandmother. Just be safe.