-Caveat Lector- From http://www.theday.com/news/print-friend.asp?NewsUID=8153D27B-A95A- 4397-855F-74650A0A0D7F
}}}>Begin www.TheDay.com: Eastern Connecticut's News Source Go Back Using minors in liquor stings called effective measure By Eileen McNamara - More Articles Published on 01/20/2002 Melanie Wilson Kristen M. Ejchorszt Theresa Earl Dana Jensen / The Day Tom Fritz, night manager for Universal Discount Package Store in Norwich, uses a $2,000 drivers license scanner to check IDs. Norwich -- On the door of his West Main Street liquor store, Paul Agranovitch has issued a stern warning on a neon orange sign to would-be underage drinkers. “If you're under 21 you are not permitted in this store unless accompanied by a parent,” the sign on the front door of the Universal Discount Package Store reads. “Everyone in a group will be asked to show an ID.” Twice the target of stings by local police, who used undercover, underage buyers, Agranovitch is taking no chances. After he was caught in a sting for a second time in September 2000, forced to pay a $750 fine and close h is store for three days, Agranovitch spent $2,000 on a computerized scanner that detects phony licenses. When he finds fakes, he alerts police and presses charges against the violator. “I take this extremely seriously,” Agranovitch said. “We don't want to sell to minors. It's not like we look at 17-, 18- or 19-year-olds as a great market.” That kind of compliance with state liquor laws is exactly what the Minors in Stings program was meant to foster, said Norwalk police Lt. Thomas Cummings, the program's creator. Since the state passed a law in 1998 making it easier for local police to use minors as undercover agents in liquor stings, dozens of police departments, including Norwich, have developed sting programs using volunteers u nder 21. Cummings began running undercover stings with minors in his town in 1990 and conducts several every year. He credits Norwalk's program and others like it across the state with keeping youngsters from drinking and driving. “The Minors in Stings program works; it saves lives,” Cummings said. In Norwich, however, the initiative has ground to a halt amid lurid allegations that Lt. James F. Daigle Jr. took nude and seminude digital pictures of three female undercover volunteers after telling the teen- agers that police protocol required the pictures. Police have placed Daigle, a 17-year veteran of the force, on paid leave while it conducts an internal investigation. Police have imposed a gag order on all officers, barring them f rom discussing the allegations and Daigle, chairman of Norwich's Republican Town Committee, has not yet publicly answered his accusers. The state this past week froze a $45,000 federal grant it awarded Norwich last year to conduct programs, such as the liquor store stings, that combat underage drinking. Officials in the Office of Policy and Management sai d that in light of the misconduct allegations, they want to make sure Norwich did not misuse part of the funds. While they view Norwich's situation as an aberration of the program, Connecticut liquor control officials, other police departments and organizations that promote anti-drinking initiatives among teen-agers worry that the accusations against Daigle could cast a negative light on the use of minors in undercover stings, a practice they believe is essential in keeping alcohol out of the hands of underage drinkers. “It's a very, very effective program,” said Joanne Morrison, spokeswoman for the Governor's Prevention Partnership, which helps police departments develop programs to fight underage drinking. Using minors as undercover ag ents, she said, makes it easier for police to identify businesses that either willingly sell to minors or don't bother to routinely check identification of obviously young customers. Once a store or restaurant owner is caught in a sting, Morrison said, it cuts in half the chance that they will violate the law again. “If this program were derailed because of these allegations, it would cost lives,” said one law enforcement official. Norwich is among 18 towns in Connecticut that last year received federal grant money for underage drinking initiatives, including stings. Since 1999 Norwich has conducted five stings; two in 1999, one in 2000 and two last year. The department asked state liquor officials to participate only in the 2000 sting. Norwich, according to state liquor control officials, is the only town in this region that conducts the stings. While the liquor control division assists local police departments in 80 percent of all undercover stings that are conducted, it imposes no regulations on how the stings are carried out. It also does not recruit minors or tell departments how to use or recruit minors, though its agents will work on stings that employ recruited volunteers. Cummings said his town has adopted written guidelines on how to recruit and use minors in stings to ensure the integrity of the program. The department uses a number of organizations, such as Police Explorer groups, churc hes and Students Against Drunk Driving chapters to recruit underage volunteers. The department's rules also require that no single officer is ever alone with a volunteer. “There are levels of supervision so there can never be any questions of the individuals being left alone with anyone,” he said. “Nothing is left to chance, nor should anything ever be left to chance.” The state also distributes to police departments a guidebook, written by the Connecticut Coalition to Stop Underage Drinking, that details how to recruit and use minors in stings. Most departments in Connecticut, Delaney said, have adopted the guidebook into their formal policies and procedures. When asked for copies of the department's policies or procedures on the undercover stings using minors, Deputy Chief Warren Mocek this week said the department has none. Mocek instead provided copies of the state guideboo k and other materials that liquor control officials give police departments that contain recommendations on how to conduct stings. He said his department relies on the guidebook and other materials for direction in conduc ting stings. “Any department that runs an enforcement program and doesn't have written, established procedures is just crazy,” said one liquor control official who asked not to be identified. “They are leaving themselves open for trou ble.” Basic rules Cummings, who helped develop the guidebook, “Including Minors in Compliance Checks,” said the first and overriding rule of any sting using underage operatives is to ensure the safety of the minor. The guidebook emphasizes that police should not recruit minors from their own town. Doing so could jeopardize the volunteer's safety if storeowners or clerks recognize them. It also could undermine the sting. “Minors...should not be local to the area where the operation is going to take place,” the guidebook says. “Obtaining a local minor could put the minor in an uncomfortable position if they walk into a (store) and the empl oyee ends up being someone he/she recognizes. This type of situation could also pose safety considerations for the minor.” “The guiding factor is you need to have a person who is completely unattached to the target area,” Cummings said. “You don't want someone who...shop owners might know. You are better off using someone from out of town.” O ne concern, he said, is that a minor could be the target of retribution by a store owner or clerk charged with selling alcohol to a minor in one of the stings. In the last three stings it conducted with underage female operatives who were recruited by Daigle and who now allege misconduct by him, Norwich ignored that rule. One of the women, Melanie Wilson, lived in Norwich near t he downtown. The parents of another, Kristen Ejchorszt, have owned a Dairy Queen for 12 years on West Main Street, less than a mile from Agranovitch's store. Ejchorszt worked in her parents' fast-food restaurant. The thir d woman, Theresa Earl, worked in a popular coffeehouse downtown for two years. Each of the three women worked near Daigle. Wilson worked at the Americus Wharf restaurant, just around the corner from the police station on Thames Street. Earl worked at the former Liberty Tree Coffee House and Eatery o n Market Street, next to a cigar shop Daigle used to co-own with another police officer. The Ejchorszts' Dairy Queen is just up the road from the police station. Daigle and other officers frequented all three restaurants, the women have said. None of the women knew each other, but all three had something else in common: Each knew Daigle for years not only as a local officer, but also as a friend. That relationship of familiarity and trust, all three have separ ately alleged to police, is what convinced them to volunteer as undercover agents when Daigle asked them. It also swayed them that he was telling the truth when he said that he was required to take topless pictures of the m to make sure they were not hiding false identification, the three women allege. In all three instances, Daigle took the pictures just prior to the start of the sting and warned his recruits that the operation could not take place if they did not consent to the pictures, the women have alleged. All three women were pressured to put aside their self-interest to carry out their civic duty, their lawyers said. “To then find out that there was no greater good that came of it is sad,” said Dado Coric, the lawyer for Earl. “Someone lied to them and took a nude picture of them. It's a significant betrayal of trust.” Lawyers for all three women have filed notice with the city that they intend to sue Daigle and the police department. Wilson and Earl additionally allege that Daigle took a second set of nude photographs of them, weeks af ter they participated in the liquor stings. Both allege that Daigle, in separate incidents months apart, told them the pictures were needed for an undercover sting into Internet child pornography that he was conducting. Ejchorszt, who took part in a sting last November, was the first to come forward with her allegations. She filed a complaint with police on Dec. 3. Sources said that when Earl and Wilson read news stories about Ejchorszt that said topless photos were not a requirement of the stings they each contacted Daigle to question him about the photographs. Daigle asked them not to tell his superiors about the pictures, sources said. Wilson has also alleged that Daigle and other officers drank beer after the sting in which she participated in 2000, and that they gave her beer as well. Go Back www.TheDay.com: Eastern Connecticut's News Source End<{{{ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Forwarded as information only; no endorsement to be presumed + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material is distributed without charge or profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of information for non-profit research and educational purposes only. + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + "Do not believe in anything simply because you have heard it. Do not believe simply because it has been handed down for many generations. 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