Pubdate: Wed, 15 Nov 2000 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2000 The New York Times Company Contact: 229 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10036 Fax: (212) 556-3622 Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://forums.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Al Baker U.S. AGENTS SEIZE COCAINE AT L.I. HOUSE AND ARREST 5 GARDEN CITY, N.Y., Nov. 15 Agents with the United States Customs Service seized 1,100 pounds of cocaine at a two-story house in Deer Park on Tuesday, and officials said they believed it was one of the largest seizures of the drug ever made on Long Island. The authorities arrested five men in connection with the seizure, and estimated that the street value of the cocaine was $120 million. They said the shipment, labeled as vegetables in waxed cardboard cartons, originated in Colombia and was trucked over the Mexican border before being taken to a house at 12 Glasgow Avenue in Deer Park. Victoria M. Ovis, an associate special agent in charge with the Customs Service, said five men from Mexico had recently moved into the house on Glasgow Avenue and had begun to set up a landscaping or gardening service. The business was known as Victor Ponce Landscaping, named for one of the men arrested this week, Victoriano Ponce. The men even had business cards made, the authorities said. "Everything they did was in furtherance of their illegal activity," Ms. Ovis said. She added that the men's sole purpose was to establish a base from which to traffic drugs on Long Island, in New York City and elsewhere in the region. "So, that didn't leave much time to go out and cut lawns or plant trees or anything like that," Ms. Ovis said. Mr. Ponce, 43, and the four others, who had lived in Chicago and Los Angeles before their arrival in Suffolk County, were each charged with conspiracy to possess and distribute narcotics, the authorities said. The other suspects were identified as Jorge Hernandez, 27; Asencion Gonzalez, 37; Thomas Solis-Pacheco, 30; and Manuel Alejandro Felix-Rios, 30. All of the men pleaded not guilty at their arraignment in Federal District Court in Brooklyn today, and all were ordered held without bail. Only Mr. Gonzales will have a bail hearing, on Monday. According to court papers, a van rented from College Point, Queens, arrived at the Glasgow Avenue house at 3:08 p.m. on Sunday and backed up to an aluminum storage shed outside the house. Mr. Ponce, who moved into the house on Sept. 22, and the others "moved in and around the van and the shed" on Sunday night, the court papers said. Once the van was returned to the office in Queens, agents of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration tested it and found cocaine, the court papers said. Agents entered the house on Tuesday, arresting some of the men there and arresting the others, who were also under surveillance, in Queens, Ms. Ovis said. She said the cocaine was packed in 21 boxes, some with "romaine" printed on the outside. The investigators said they also seized $10,000 in cash, scales for weighing drugs and other paraphernalia. They found cellular phones, books and other records "which show the names, addresses and telephone numbers of purchasers and suppliers of cocaine," the court papers said. In August 1999, the police in New York City seized 1,566 pounds of cocaine at a warehouse in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn. At the time, that shipment was valued at $89 million. - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew