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Archive
from the September 27, 1996 edition Miami's Vice Returns, but Not on TV
Jeanne DeQuine, Special to The Christian Science Monitor
MIAMI—The latest wrinkle in South Florida's evolving drug trade is
revealed by Polaroids taped to a wall in Terminal E of Miami
International Airport. The mugshots on the US Custom's "Wall of
Shame" are of heroin smugglers - lots of them. Not only are Miami port officials seeing a dramatic jump in
heroin "mules" entering the US here, but cocaine smuggling - the
scourge of the '80s - has also returned with a vengeance. "Our cocaine seizures are double what they were last year,"
says John McGee, assistant special agent in charge of drug
smuggling investigations for Customs in Miami. In the past year,
the amount of Customs-confiscated coke jumped from 34,000 pounds to
70,000 pounds. The rebound of Miami as a major transshipment point for
South American drug cartels, notably Colombia's Cali, is being
attributed to a strategic shift in experienced law enforcement
personnel and resources to the Southwest during the past five
years. Government agencies have been focusing on the US-Mexico
border, through which 70 percent of the cocaine found in the US
crossed over. Customs, for example, downsized in Miami, decreasing its
staff from 500 to 350. In addition, the Coast Guard has fewer ships
to patrol the Caribbean. "There has been a lot of attention paid to the Southwest
border by the government and law enforcement agencies," Mr. McGee
says. "Maybe because of publicity, more have returned to their own
favorite stomping grounds." Pam Brown, special agent for the Drug Enforcement
Administration in Miami, has a little different take. The DEA puts
more emphasis on the organized business aspect of drug cartels.
"Cocaine traffickers are just like any other business people. When
an area is available, it will be exploited," Ms. Brown
says. Customs officials say that heroin is coming through Miami
like never before. Inspectors at Miami International Airport have
apprehended about 170 couriers trying to pass through with
heroin. Travelers most often swallow pellets of the drug, hoping to
pass unnoticed through Customs. At Miami's airport, Customs
officials trained to note signs of nervousness often take suspected
body carriers to local hospitals for x-rays to determine if they
are carrying the drug. Those that are couriers get their photos
plastered on the airport's walls. Drug trade expands The influx isn't only affecting South Florida: It is making
its way from here to many other places throughout the country -
particularly to the nation's youth. "We're seeing the onset of a new heroin epidemic to a new
generation of younger, healthier, and wealthier users," says Jim
Hall, executive director of UpFront, a Miami-based drug research
group. "This expansion is a result of a dramatic increase in supply
of drugs produced here and abroad," Mr. Hall adds. US drug czar Gen. Barry McCaffrey recently said that "heroin
has become a global threat." In testimony before a US House committee last week, General
McCaffrey proposed extending the nation's antidrug campaign with a
specific emphasis on heroin. He urged expanded treatment for
chronic addicts, and closer coordination between schools and drug
treatment agencies to treat youthful users of tobacco and alcohol.
He also underscored the need for early intervention with families
of youthful drug users. Local efforts Drug enforcement officials here are calling for additional
resources - in financing and staff. But while they're waiting, they are turning more to
high-tech intelligence-gathering methods to catch
smugglers. Michael Sheehan, spokesman for Customs in Miami, says
"there's no silver bullet," but that they are asking for more
manpower. In addition, he says, Customs has a strong research and
development program going. It is churning out better x-ray
equipment to monitor airplane and shipping cargoes entering the
US. The agency also is focusing on new and better equipment for
air testing, Mr. Sheehan says. The new technology tests air samples
inside airplanes and ships for microparticles of cocaine. The DEA has committed over $11 million for domestic heroin
enforcement. In South Florida, it has joined with local law
enforcement agencies to step up seizures. It also says it is relying on the latest
intelligence-gathering capabilities to monitor the activities of 40
different Cali factions that have set up in South Florida. DEA
officials say they use court-approved wiretaps and other
"enormously powerful computers" to tap into what one official
describes as "Cali factions that are run like Fortune 500
companies." The administration has pressured certain national leaders,
including Colombian president Ernesto Samper, to crack down. But
Mr. Samper himself has been accused of accepting campaign donations
from drug lords. Colombia reportedly produces 80 percent of the world's
cocaine and 25 percent of US purchased heroin.
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