Pubdate: Fri, 25 Aug 2000 Source: Corpus Christi Caller-Times (TX) Copyright: 2000 Corpus Christi Caller-Times Address: P.O. Box 9136, Corpus Christi, TX 78469-9136 Feedback: http://www.caller.com/commcentral/email_ed.htm Website: http://www.caller.com/ Author: Deborah Martinez Gramm Examines U.S. Customs Operations U.S. Senator Introduced To P-3 AEW Radar Aircraft, Which Are Used To Hunt Drug Smugglers U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm got a first-hand look Thursday at how local U.S Customs agents are waging a decades-old drug battle as he flew over the Gulf of Mexico aboard a Customs turboprop. "The war on drugs is an uphill battle," Gramm said. "We're still trying to find ways to win it. We're doubling the fleet. We passed legislation to increase funding for more technology in Customs service and for 1,700 new Customs agents." Gramm spent about an hour, 10,000 feet into the air, aboard a P-3 AEW radar aircraft that patrolled its way as far south as the waters off Brownsville's coast. Used as one of the U.S. Customs' primary drug hunters, the P-3 AEW is the fifth airplane to join the U.S. Customs locally and the first of four new aircraft designed to enhance the fleet. U.S. Customs in Corpus Christi use six P-3 AEW aircraft, nicknamed the "Dome." The radar plane has a large radar dish on its roof and is able to detect aircraft in a 250-mile radius. Radar operators aboard the plane monitor surrounding aircraft, looking for red flags such as low-flying planes who may be trying to avoid land radar, or planes that may be going too slow. Once a suspicious plane is tracked, the Dome crew will alert a P3-A interceptor aircraft to take pictures of the plane's identification tail wing number and match it up to records in a database, said Customs radar operator Jerry Lunceford. "If a plane is too low, then it's trying to not be noticed," Lunceford said. "If it's numbers don't match up with our database, then they probably tampered with the I.D. numbers. It's enough to make us suspicious and follow them." The 30-year-old plus aircraft are the Navy's gift to Customs, which then revamps them with radar equipment and new engines. Typical missions consist of six to eight-hour flights patrolling the U.S./Mexico border or up to 10-day detachment operations as far south as Aruba, Peru and Ecuador. "We need to let people know that we haven't forgotten the war on drugs," Gramm said. "There may be some people who are discouraged. We're working to keep drug thugs from taking over, like in countries such as Colombia." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens