Pubdate: Wed, 05 Jan 2000 Source: Hartford Courant (CT) Copyright: 2000 The Hartford Courant Contact: http://www.courant.com/ Forum: http://chat.courant.com/scripts/webx.exe Author: Edmund Mahony, The Hartford Courant AGENTS: PUERTO RICO A HUB IN EAST COAST U.S. DRUG TRADE MIAMI - Law enforcement experts who combat drug smuggling in the Caribbean warned Congress Monday that Puerto Rico is awash in cocaine and the drug problem on the island is approaching crisis proportions. ``Today, cocaine and heroin traffickers from Colombia have transformed Puerto Rico into the largest staging area in the Caribbean for illicit drugs destined for the U.S. market,'' said Michael S. Vigil, who runs the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's operations in the Caribbean. Vigil was one of four senior U.S. law enforcement officers who were called to testify Tuesday by U.S. Rep. Dan Burton, the Indiana Republican who convened a hearing of his House Government Reform Committee in nearby Sweetwater, Fla. Burton used two days of committee hearings in south Florida - where a large Cuban exile community harbors a deep resentment for the government of Fidel Castro - as a platform to showcase evidence of narcotics smuggling through Cuba while complaining that President Clinton is not doing enough about it. Playing a theme that resonates deeply among the local Cuban community, Burton charged that Clinton is downplaying evidence of Cuban drug trafficking so he can win congressional support for normalizing relations with Cuba. But the problems that large-scale international narcotics trafficking have created in Puerto Rico were spotlighted as well Tuesday and were never in dispute, even if Cuba's role in the problem was. The most recent figures compiled by a variety of law enforcement agencies show that one-third of all the cocaine coming into the United States is ferried over four routes across the Caribbean. One of those routes, from South America through Puerto Rico and the nearby U.S. Virgin Islands, accounts for 6 percent of the total. Also, Jose A. Fuentes-Agostini, Puerto Rico's outgoing attorney general, complained to the committee Tuesday that the figures compiled by law enforcement agencies on cocaine shipment through his island are unrealistically low. The fastest-growing drop-off point for Colombian cocaine bound for the United States is the island of Hispaniola, which contains Haiti and the Dominican Republic, two improverished nations with little effective law enforcment. Much of the cocaine from Hispaniola moves into Puerto Rico before being shipped on to U.S. East Coast cities, Fuentes-Agostini said. And, he said, the amount of narcotics moving from Hispaniola to Puerto Rico is underreported. A significant quantity is difficult to report because it is carried by illegal aliens and alien smugglers who travel the 90 miles by sea from the Dominican Republic to western Puerto Rico in high speed wooden boats, he said. The trip, in 30-foot-long wooden skiffs that don't reflect radar, takes five hours, he said. It is so successful that the smugglers consider the boats themselves disposable. ``The number of go-fast boats found abandoned in Puerto Rico by the U.S. Customs Service and other agencies definitely supports our intelligence that smugglers consider these to be disposable smuggling platforms,'' John C. Varrone, executive director of eastern U.S. operations for the Customs Service, told the committee. Puerto Rico's emerging role as an East Coast narcotics hub has created enormous problems for the island's inhabitants. Eighty percent of the homicides on Puerto Rico are drug-related, many the result of battles between rival syndicates who are distribution agents for Colombian cartels. In addition, the enormous wealth of the cartels have generated rampant corruption. San Juan is the third-busiest seaport in North America and the 14th-busiest in the world. ``Criminal organizations have utilized their financial capabilities to corrupt mechanics, longshoremen, airline employees, ticket-counter agents, as well as government officials and others whose corrupt practices broaden the scope of the trafficking,'' said Vigil, the DEA's Caribbean supervisor. Fuentes-Agostini suggested the narcotics problem in Puerto Rico is much like that in south Florida in the 1980s, when battles between cocaine cowboys and high-tech police officers gave rise to popular movies and a television show. He said Puerto Rico is doing what Florida did to solve its problem: call attention to it and spend money on it. Already, the Puerto Rican commonwealth and a variety of U.S. law enforcement agencies have increased spending and developed a number of law enforcemnt initiatives. Puerto Rico is expanding its police force and Burton promised to help increase the number of federal judges on the island from the existing six to nine. Still, a problem remains, the experts testified. Mainland law enforcement officers from agencies like Customs, the DEA and FBI fiercely resist transfer to Puerto Rico. When assigned there, they work toward quick reassignment. ``Such quality of life issues as inadequate public services, unreliable utilities, limited accessibility of medical services, the high cost of living, an exclusionary social structure, limited availability of appropriate schools for children and the high incidence of crime have contributed to early turnover and family separations,'' Vigil said. Customs and the DEA are trying to develop contractual, financial incentives to induce qualified drug agents to work in Puerto Rico. The conservative, Republican members of the committee Tuesday spent as much time condemning Castro and President Clinton as they did discussing Puerto Rico. Members, particularly Burton, tried to pressure DEA experts into labeling Cuba a major distributor of narcotics, something the U.S. Department of State has refused to do. The law enforcement witnesses said there is evidence suggesting Cuba is active in drug smuggling, but said there are fewer signs of trafficking there than there are in other countries. ``At this point I don't have evidence of organizations shipping huge volumes of cocaine to Europe and the U.S. through Cuba,'' William E. Ledwith, chief of international operations for the DEA, testified. But Ledwith said he has evidence that traffickers do move drugs through Cuban territory and are rarely molested by the Cuban government. ``I do not believe that Castro has done everything that he can,'' Ledwith said. ``We have heard many times from undercover contacts that the crooks feel very comfortable in Cuba. They feel free and in no danger of apprehension.'' Burton repeatedly pressed Ledwith to concede that a $1.5 billion shipment of cocaine, under consignment to a Cuban company when seized aboard a container ship in Colombia in December 1998, was bound for U.S. distribution. Ledwith refused, saying there is preliminary evidence the shipment - 7.25 metric tons - was bound for Europe. ``If we had indications that that shipment of 7.25 metric tons was headed toward the U.S.,'' Ledwith said, ``I would be standing here before you and telling you that.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake