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Butler County ranks fourth for drug arrests

By Kelly Ament

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Published: Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Updated: Sunday, February 14, 2010

Butler County ranked fourth in 2008 for the number of drug arrests made during traffic stops, according to Sgt. Carla Taulbee of the Ohio State Highway Patrol Public Affairs Unit.

"Butler County had 159 drug arrests (in 2008)," Taulbee said.

Taulbee said Stark County was the first in Ohio for drug arrests with 214. Franklin County followed with 209.

According to Taulbee, there were 5,226 total drug arrests conducted during traffic stops in the entire state of Ohio in 2008. During these traffic stops, 5.2 million grams of illegal narcotics were seized at an "estimated worth of $47 million," she said.

While she noted crack cocaine, heroine, ecstasy and PCP (Phencyclidine) were among the most common illegal drugs confiscated, Taulbee said "marijuana would be No. 1."

Since January 2009, 1,193 drug arrests have been made. Taulbee said this is a 4 percent increase in the number of drug arrests made during the same three-month time period in 2008.

According to Taulbee, the narcotics statistics came from case records and the Ohio State Highway Patrol has databases containing information from all of Ohio's narcotics cases, including dates, charges and the quantity and types of drugs seized.

While many may wonder if the prevalence of drugs in Butler County is somehow related to the presence of Miami University and other colleges in surrounding areas, Sgt. Jim Squance of the Oxford Police Department said he doesn't believe it is.

"A big part of it (the high number of drug arrests) is the Interstate," Squance said. "The State Highway Patrol is making a lot of arrests on I-70 and I-75. (I-75) is a major line between Dayton, Detroit, South Atlanta (and) Miami."

Though he said there are not a lot of drug arrests on U.S. Route 27, Squance said the connecting roads and ability to transport drugs impacts the city of Oxford.

"I'm sure some of it flows back into the hands of college students," Squance said. "Here in Oxford, we see some mushrooms and meth."

However, Squance said the most common drug in Oxford, like in Ohio, is marijuana.

"We're quite aware of the drug problem and are addressing it with special units," Squance said.

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