Only in New York: Get your pot order delivered
'It's better than going to some street corner and getting ... killed'
 
NEW YORK - In a city where you can get just about anything delivered to your 
door - groceries, dry cleaning, Chinese food - pot smokers are increasingly 
ordering takeout marijuana from drug rings that operate with remarkable 
corporate-style attention to customer satisfaction.
An untold number of otherwise law-abiding professionals in New York are having 
their pot delivered to their homes instead of visiting drug dens or hanging out 
on street corners.

Among the legions of home delivery customers is Chris, a 37-year-old salesman 
in Manhattan. He dials a pager number and gets a return call from a cheery 
dispatcher who takes his order for potent strains of marijuana.

Within a couple of hours, a well-groomed delivery man - sometimes a 
moonlighting actor or chef - arrives at the doorstep of his Manhattan apartment 
carrying weed neatly packaged in small plastic containers.

"These are very nice, discreet people," said Chris, who spoke to The Associated 
Press on condition only his first name be used. "There's an unspoken trust. 
It's better than going to some street corner and getting ripped off or killed."

The phenomenon isn't new. It has long been the case around the country that 
those with enough money and the right connections could get cocaine or other 
drugs discreetly delivered to their homes and places of business.

But experts say home delivery has been growing in popularity, thanks to a 
shrewder, corporate style of dealing designed to put customers at ease and 
avoid the messy turf wars associated with other drugs.

'The trend in the past 10 years'
"It's certainly been the trend in the past 10 years in urban areas that are 
becoming gentrified," said Ric Curtis, an anthropology professor at John Jay 
College of Criminal Justice who specializes in the drug culture.

The corporate model - and its profit potential - were demonstrated late last 
year when the Drug Enforcement Administration announced that it had taken down 
a highly sophisticated organization dubbed the Cartoon Network. DEA agents 
arrested 12 people after using wiretaps and surveillance and making undercover 
buys.

Authorities estimated that since 1999, the ring made a fortune by delivering 
more than a ton of marijuana, some of it grown hydroponically - without soil - 
in the basement of a Cape Cod-style home on 10 acres in Vermont, where an 
informant reported the smell of the crop was overpowering.

The dealers, working out of a roving call center, processed 600 orders a day - 
from doctors, lawyers, Wall Street traders - even on Christmas, investigators 
said. Authorities refused to give names, but in one conversation overheard last 
October, a courier boasted about the ring's upscale clientele, according to 
court papers.

"We know comedians. We know celebrities," the courier said. "So you might meet 
a rapper, a singer. We go to a lot of people."

One former customer named Lucia, a 30-year-old employee at an entertainment 
cable network, recalled blatant deals done at the company's Manhattan 
headquarters. Executives and employees alike would pool their orders as if they 
were buying lunch together, then await the arrival of a courier, Lucia said.

The cost was $60 for one plastic case holding two grams of marijuana - a steep 
markup, but worth it because of convenience and quality, she said.

Packaged for holiday delivery
"It was kind, kind bud," she said. "Yummy stuff."

The emphasis on customer service and satisfaction was evident at one stash 
house, where agents found more than 30 pounds of marijuana in plain view, 
already packaged for holiday delivery, court papers said. The packages featured 
the drug ring's cartoon character logo and the greeting, "Happy Holidays From 
Your Friends at Cartoon!"

The operation's alleged mastermind, John Nebel, "should have been the CEO of a 
Fortune 500 company," said his attorney, Steve Zissou.

Instead, Nebel, who is awaiting trial, could get a minimum of 10 years in 
federal prison if convicted. Prosecutors also are demanding the forfeiture of 
$22 million in cash, homes, cars, motorcycles and a boat owned by him and his 
cohorts.

At Lucia's workplace, employees were "bummed" by the news of Nebel's bust, 
Lucia said. But worries that the office might get raided evaporated, and other 
dealers stepped in, though "their product does not hold up to Cartoon," she 
said.

Investigators seized customers' names and addresses from the drug operation's 
computer logs. But those people face little risk of prosecution, authorities 
said.

Authorities conceded the home delivery trade will probably survive because of 
the high demand for marijuana and the low penalties for dealing it.

Under state law, most marijuana offenses "are not treated as very significant 
crimes," said Bridget G. Brennen, the city's special narcotic prosecutor. "That 
is why you see the marijuana delivery services proliferating. Their exposure is 
slight."

 The Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in anarchy"
            Groupe de communication Mulindwas 
"avec Yoweri Museveni, l'Ouganda est dans l'anarchie"

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