Letter: King's Cross deaths could be due to police clean-up

Matthew Sutton
Saturday 17 April 1993 18:02 EDT
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YOU reported the tragic death of seven heroin overdose victims in the King's Cross area ('Heroin kills seven in nine days at King's Cross', 11 April). Their deaths were said to be related to heroin of 70 per cent purity, twice that usually supplied on the street. This outcome disappointed the police who had recently removed local heroin dealers in an attempt to clean up the area.

These events may be related. The London heroin market is stable and relationships between dealers and users are reliable and long-term. By removing established dealers, the police may have severely disrupted the local heroin market, inadvertently replacing known dealers selling drugs of known purity with 'new entrepreneurs' selling drugs with potentially fatal characteristics.

The Swiss police's blitz on 'Needle Park', Zurich, last year may have had harmful effects also.

The success of police activity should not be judged on the number of arrests, but on the influence of these arrests on drug use and the harm arising from this habit. Without careful consideration of the full effects of police interventions on drug markets, unfortunate outcomes, such as those in King's Cross, might regrettably come to be expected rather than be surprising.

Matthew Sutton

University of York

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