Pubdate: Wed, 08 Aug 2001 Source: Augusta Chronicle, The (GA) Copyright: 2001 The Augusta Chronicle Contact: http://www.augustachronicle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/31 Note: Does not publishing letters from outside of the immediate Georgia and South Carolina circulation area FAT FISH COPS A PLEA A common complaint about the federal government's war against unlawful drugs is that law-enforcement catches the small fry (often black street dealers), while the big fish pulling all the strings and making the super bucks (usually wealthy, white big shots) get away. This happens with such frequency that it has led to suspicions, if not allegations, from some civil rights activists that there's an ugly double-standard at work here - targeting the black community for most drug arrests, because those cases are easier to prosecute, and also to get young African-American men off the street. Well, it's heartening to report that one big white fish is finally being brought to justice - and we do mean big, figuratively and literally. After denying his guilt for months corpulent 46-year-old Robert Snell of Grovetown, known in drug circles as ''Fat Boy,'' copped a plea Monday under what is known as the ''kingpin statute.'' Big-spending Snell, who hadn't held a job for over a decade, admitted to making millions by engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise. Federal authorities were more specific. Snell, they said, was a key player in a seven-man narcotics trade operation that bought and sold large quantities of cocaine, methamphetamines, ecstacy and marijuana. Drug Enforcement Administration Agent Patrick Clayton told Chief Judge Dudley Bowen Jr. that Snell is one of the largest narcotics suppliers he's ever encountered in the Augusta area. Indeed, federal law-enforcers, who haven't exactly covered themselves with glory lately, get high marks in their handling of the Snell case. DEA undercover agents had the fat man dead to rights, wheeling and dealing on tape. As part of his plea agreement, Snell will surrender $2.5 million in drug money, plus a lavish 5-bedroom house he was building in Grovetown. And, significantly, he also agreed to ''rat out'' other big fish higher up in the criminal food chain. Snell's maximum sentence could be life behind bars, a term he richly deserves, but if the feds are impressed with his cooperation, Judge Bowen may sentence him to something less than that next fall. Let's just hope whatever the sentence is, it's at least as long as a street dealer would get. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D