Pubdate: Wed, 13 Sep 2000 Source: Albuquerque Journal (NM) Copyright: 2000 Albuquerque Journal Contact: P.O. Drawer J, Albuquerque, N.M. 87103 Website: http://www.abqjournal.com/ Author: Guillermo Contreras POOH HAD BELLY FULL OF CASH Somewhere between Chicago and Albuquerque, Winnie the Pooh put on 5 pounds - - and it wasn't from honey. Anti-drug agents acting on suspicions seized the stuffed animal and a gift-wrapped box from two women on an Amtrak train in October. Documents filed last month in federal court in Albuquerque said the box and stuffed animal were searched and found to contain $68,000 in cash, wrapped in bundles and held by rubber bands. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration alleges the money was for drugs, and the federal government is trying to keep the cash. Besides that case, agents have seized nearly $175,000 in cash in two other stops aboard Amtrak, according to civil forfeiture complaints filed in federal court in Albuquerque. That will add to $266,191 that was forfeited between Oct. 1, 1999 and July 21, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen Kotz. Not all of the money came from seizures on Amtrak, but Kotz said that all money goes into a special federal fund. "In essence, what we do with that is use the proceeds to fight drug trafficking," he said. In the case involving the stuffed animal, DEA agent Kevin Small and State Police agent Jonathan Salazar - a drug task force officer - found the doll and the box after getting permission from Rafaela Sena and Esperanza Flores-Delgado to search two paper bags. Bill Hansen, head of the DEA in New Mexico, declined to say Tuesday how the women were singled out for questioning. But he said his agents conduct their drug-interception operations twice a day aboard eastbound and westbound Amtrak trains that stop in Albuquerque. In many cases, agents are tipped off by anonymous callers. The affidavit said the agents targeted the women after checking Amtrak's reservations and noting that a Carla and Esperanza Flores were traveling on one-way tickets, purchased with cash, from Cleveland to Los Angeles. The train stopped in Albuquerque. The affidavit said the last-minute reservation and payment in cash is consistent with methods used by drug money couriers. The women also showed the agents California driver's licenses with names that differed from the names on the tickets. Small's affidavit said the stuffed doll and the box were unusually heavy, and that when the women were questioned, they trembled from nervousness and gave inconsistent answers. The affidavit said Small noticed there were hard square objects in the stomach and the head of the bear, and it had some stitching that was different from the factory stitching. Under questioning, the women said they bought the Winnie the Pooh doll at a Target store in Chicago, the affidavit said. The agents kept the items until they could get a search warrant, gave the women a receipt and let them continue on their trip. The affidavit said agents later obtained the search warrant and weighed the doll. They found it weighed 7.4 pounds, called a local Target store and were told that the same doll normally would weigh 2.5 pounds. "The money was hidden in the Winnie the Pooh and another package," Hansen said. "We alleged it was for drugs - either from a prior purchase or a planned purchase." A check of U.S. District Court records Tuesday showed no criminal charges have been filed against the women in New Mexico. However, court records say that Sena, of El Cajon, Calif., is targeted by the DEA in San Diego as allegedly being part of a ring that smuggles marijuana into the United States, and that she routinely travels to eastern cities where the drug is distributed. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D