Pubdate: Wed, 21 Jun 2000 Source: Arizona Daily Star (AZ) Copyright: 2000 Pulitzer Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.azstarnet.com/ Author: Inger Sandal COUNTY AFTER CRACK MOTEL Hindu Group Says It Knew Nothing Of Drug Dealings In Building It Owns In one room is a religious shrine. In several others, there are black smudges from concussion grenades lobbed in a police raid that uncovered drugs and weapons. Welcome to the Monterey Motel, whose owners, a religious society, are fighting to keep their investment amid allegations they gave an enterprising crack dealer free rein on the property. The Pima County Attorney's Office recently initiated civil forfeiture proceedings against the building, at 505 W. Miracle Mile. The area surrounding the motel has long held a reputation as a center of drug dealing and prostitution, but investigators allege that the Monterey had cornered the market on crack cocaine. "It was kind of like Super Kmart being next to a mom-and-pop drugstore," said Tucson police Sgt. Lew Bentley, who started an investigation last fall in response to neighborhood complaints. The attorney for the Sri Ram Society, a Hindu group and part of the International Hari Krishna Movement, said society members such as President Krsna Namananda Das may have lived on the property but were worlds apart from their drug-using guests. "They're in their own world, oriented on getting high," attorney D. Jesse Smith said. "Mr. Das was preoccupied with . . . Godly concerns, and the police were focusing on making a bust. They may have viewed the same things very differently." Das and his wife maintain they were unaware of any drug dealing until police raided the motel on Feb. 26. "It sounded like some kind of war going on," said Das, who had been asleep. His wife, Lailo Khalilova, agreed: "We wanted to call the police, but it was the police." The religious group had no experience operating a motel when it bought the property four years ago and only intended to rent to the public until the mortgage was paid, attorney Smith said. "Unfortunately it's in the kind of neighborhood that attracts a high-crime clientele," Smith said. "They just didn't have the knowledge or training to properly operate the business - but that in no way means they were doing anything wrong." Deputy County Attorney Kevin Krejci has a different view. "It appears as far as we know that the drug dealing that was going on was fairly open, it was fairly frequent and that the . . . officers of the corporation were present in places where drugs were openly on display." In addition to the property, valued at $482,013, authorities are trying to seize $14,013.76 in cash and personal property taken in the raid, according to a complaint filed April 26 in Pima County Superior Court. "If you allow someone to use your property knowing that person is selling narcotics and that person is deriving their income from selling narcotics and that . . . they're paying for their room with some of the income, then you're putting your property at risk because you're allowing it to be a site of drug trafficking and profiting thereby," Krejci said. Smith said he understands why police could have thought Das was involved in the operation. Officers found white powder and $13,000 in cash in the safe when they searched the motel office. Criminal charges were filed against Das and another priest, then dropped. Testing showed the powder was homeopathic medicine from India. The cash was from a T-shirt concession at the Sabino Canyon Visitor's Center. Das said police questioned him extensively about a motel guest's husband, Jimmy Renke - "if I am taking money from Jimmy, keeping it at the office and drug dealing. I said no," Das recalled. Authorities allege Renke was at the center of the drug operation. "He came out here and got involved in the narcotics business, made some contacts, got himself set up in the hotel and wanted to take over as much of the crack cocaine business as he could," said Sgt. Bentley, who led the Police Department's West Side community response team. "He was a guy who used intimidation, force and crack cocaine to get (people) to do whatever he wanted them to do," Bentley said. Renke, who faces trial July 5 on drug and weapons charges, used video surveillance and sentries who actively patrolled the property to protect himself from police, Bentley said. "They felt they were pretty well-secured inside that hotel," Bentley said. Das said he never questioned the installation of a video security camera outside Room 17. "In America it's not a big thing for someone to have a camera," he said. Das said he and his wife were in India when Renke arrived on the scene, and returned only 23 days before the raid. "He was only visiting here," Das said." His wife was renting the room, and he used to come and visit. . . . He's just a nice guy; that's all I know." Attorney Smith faulted police for allowing the drug sales to continue after first learning about them. "If they knew people were selling drugs, they should have gone ahead and arrested them instead of letting them go on," Smith said. "It's not the fault of the temple." Bentley said police talked "numerous, countless times" about problems but got no cooperation from the society's vice president, who ran the motel in Das' absence and has returned to India. Bentley said a bust was delayed because it took time to build a case with the extraordinary security system Renke had installed. Quick busts also have drawbacks, prosecutor Krejci said. "Instead of taking one dealer off the street, you may miss the opportunity to take a whole organization out of business." Police took extra precautions during the raid because they considered Renke extremely dangerous. Officers found Renke in Room 17 with a revolver under his pillow and a shotgun and a crossbow nearby. A Pima County grand jury indicted Renke March 7 on three drug charges, five weapons charges and one count of fortification of a building used for the sale or manufacture of dangerous or narcotic drugs. Neither Renke nor his attorney could be reached for comment. Debbie Greene, another guest, was indicted on four drug possession charges and two weapons charges. Court records show no one contests that narcotics were found in several of the rooms, but defense attorneys maintain their clients were not involved. Tucson City Councilman Jerry Anderson said the area has long had problems with "landlords who are not responsible enough to screen who they rent to - they let just anyone in there who has cash to pay rent." The Monterey Motel itself has been a problem for a while, Anderson said. "They've been suspected of allowing their tenants to conduct illegal activities and been aware of it. The management has been aware of it - both prostitution and drug dealing," he said. "It looks like we have the goods on them to shut them down." The action is just one step in a larger renaissance Anderson envisions for the area. "It's going to take time, and it's going to take some investment from the city. For so long it's had a tradition of if you want to score drugs or look for a prostitute that Miracle Mile was the place to go." Meanwhile, the raid has left the Sri Ram Society with no money to build the temple it envisioned. Members also overpaid for the property when they moved from Hawaii, attorney Smith said, and revenues are disappointing. The only time the motel's 16 rooms are full is during the annual Tucson Gem and Mineral Showcase. Only five or six of the 16 rooms are occupied the rest of the year, Das said. "Sometimes all week nobody comes." Weekly rates average $150 to $175, while a single night is $30. All of the guests who lived there at the time of the raid are gone, and Das has repaired most of the damage he said police caused by bursting into rooms. And none of the people who were arrested is ever welcome to come back, said Das, who has photographs that show him in a life of religious study. His work with the society has taken him to Hawaii, India, Bangladesh and Japan. He said he and his wife follow strict principles that forbid intoxication, gambling, sex except for procreation and eating animal products. The society hopes that Pima County will drop its forfeiture action once all the facts come out in the case. "The truth is that, ourselves," Das said, "we never saw drugs or how they look like." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek