They come from Edina, Eden Prairie and Golden Valley to buy drugs in the most crime-ridden blocks of north Minneapolis.
They trade cash for marijuana, cocaine and methamphetamines, and then are gone.
Last year, 56 percent of drug arrests in north Minneapolis were of people who live outside the area, according to an analysis by the Star Tribune of the nearly 1,400 drug-related cases in north Minneapolis last year. Of those, nearly one in seven arrests were residents from the city's affluent western suburbs. The arrests ranged from narcotics to possessing marijuana in a motor vehicle.
"They don't have the resources in suburban neighborhoods where they can find drugs readily, so naturally they go to poorer neighborhoods," said David Lewis, who has lived in north Minneapolis for 35 years.
Officers pulled over a 38-year-old Prior Lake woman near North Commons park last July and found marijuana inside the vehicle, according to police records. A 35-year-old man was arrested in the Shingle Creek neighborhood, half an hour from his home in Eagan, and charged with several counts of drug possession. Another was arrested for drug possession near Folwell Park, 25 miles south of his home in Ramsey.
North Minneapolis has dealt with a persistent blight of drugs and violence for decades, problems that have made it tougher to attract more affluent residents and a vibrant mix of businesses. Despite increased and smarter enforcement, drug dealing has evolved into a far more mobile and fast-paced business, making it harder to disrupt. Drug arrests continue to rise, and a growing number of suspects are being found with cocaine and such opiates as morphine and codeine in their system.
The thriving drug trade has worn out many North Side residents and frustrated police, who must quickly adapt to a rapidly evolving cat-and-mouse game with buyers and dealers.
"The majority of the arrests we are making, the buyers are really white males and females right now," said Minneapolis police inspector Mike Friestleben, who took over command of the North Side precinct after years of working the overnight shift in the district.