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.• <br />40 <br />40 <br />Ll <br />Edward Byrne Memorial State and Local Law <br />Enforcement Assistance Formula Grant Program <br />uaia <br />Refer to the BOA Grants Management Technical Assistance workshop Manual Use this as a guide to assist <br />you in completing Section 0 <br />Problem Identification Briefly describe a specific problem to be addressed with subgrant funds If you are <br />seeking funds to continue existing project activities, your problem statpment mustalso provide a shortsummary <br />of your current program and describe any gaps between current and desired project results <br />Urogram Description 'Briefly describe Crow project activities will address the targeted problem describe who <br />will do what, when, where and how <br />SEE PAGE 2 OF INSTRUCTIONS ON ITEMS TO INCL -UDE <br />Sfaa below and use confinirafIon pages as necessary <br />PROBLEM IDE=NTIFICATION <br />Indian River County is located in East Central Florida and in land mass represents 540 square <br />miles. The 100,000 plus population resides primarily in the south and northern part of the <br />county. The land mass to the west is dedicated to agriculture and the entire eastern coast is <br />shaped by water. These two factors: undeveloped and isolated land area ripe for growing and <br />clandestine activity coupled with avenues for waterway importation and transportation make <br />illicit activity attractive to the element bringing narcotics into our community. The law <br />enforcement community of Indian River County estimates that over 50 percent of all crimes are <br />attributed to drug abuse. Drug arrest continue to increase for both sales and possession, in <br />the county. Drug arrests for sale and possession of drugs is alarming. According to UCR <br />records, the Indian River County Sheriff's Office made 331 drug arrest in 1991, 239 in 1992, <br />291 in 1993, 320 in 1994, and 300 in 1995 <br />The M.A.C.E. Unit has conducted 583 drug related investigations and has arrested 495 drug <br />offenders, since it's inception October 1, 1993. Curring the grant year 1993-94, some project <br />goals were not meta The reasons vary, from the assimilation of detectives from three <br />agencies, as well as training them in drug-related investigations. In addition, when the original <br />program objectives were established, they were based on county wide arrests: these include <br />arrests by uniform officers from all the municipalities as well as the Sheriff's Office uniform <br />deputies. The M.A.C.E. Unit only claims arrest and investigations initiated by itself. <br />Substance abuse continues to be a major problem for the entire nation. Drug offenders are <br />not curtailed by any boundaries; they cross jurisdictional boundaries every day to sell, buy, or <br />deliver illegal goods to our citizens, students, and work force. In order to combat the drug <br />increase activity, it is necessary to consolidate our efforts regarding manpower. Disbanding it <br />would not benefit society, but only to thu drug dealers. <br />A recap of the M.A.C.E. Units activities are as follows. During the 1994-95 grant year, the <br />M.A.C.E. Unit, with most of the initial start-up problems resolved , was able to meet most of its <br />stated objectives. The purchase of additional equipment through "lapsed" funds and Project <br />Generated Income assisted the unit's surveillance and monitoring capabilities, enhancing drug- <br />related investigations and providing for greater officer safety. The purchase of this equipment <br />has and will continue to secure more convictions due to better preparation and suspect <br />identification. <br />The grant year 1995-96, the M.A.C.E, Unit targeted repeat offenders and molded its <br />investigations to move these offenders into the federal court system. This led to greater <br />quality of arrests and increased sentence lengths while reducing the overall number of arrests. <br />The length and severity of these sentences enabled the unit to shut -down a major narcotic- <br />Sabgranl ApplxeUon <br />section 11- Page 3 of 16 <br />