Pubdate: Thu, 01 Feb 2001 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2001 San Jose Mercury News Contact: 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, CA 95190 Fax: (408) 271-3792 Website: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Forum: http://forums.bayarea.com/webx/cgi-bin/WebX Author: LENNY SAVINO Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption) DEA INFLATED FIGURES IN 36-NATION DRUG SWEEP Number Of Arrests Not Supported; Other Inconsistencies Found SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico -- The Drug Enforcement Administration used phony figures to tout the alleged success of a 36-nation ``major takedown'' of drug traffickers in the Caribbean and Latin America last fall. The DEA's scorecard on ``Operation Libertador'' reported 2,876 arrests, but a Mercury News Washington Bureau investigation found that agency officials have no evidence to support hundreds of them. Hundreds more were routine busts for marijuana possession, and some drug eradication figures were also counted in a State Department program to burn marijuana plants. And although the DEA said $30.2 million in criminal assets were seized during Libertador, $30 million of that was confiscated four weeks before the operation. The DEA official who masterminded the exercise -- since promoted to head DEA's international operations -- admits some discrepancies but says the international cooperation that Libertador promoted is what counts. Libertador was described as a ``tremendous success'' by its leader, Michael Vigil, then head of the DEA's regional office in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Libertador, the fourth U.S.-led regional drug crackdown since 1998, intended to engage U.S., Caribbean and Latin American drug authorities simultaneously in what the DEA called ``an attempt to dismantle top-echelon traffickers in the region.'' However, the DEA's internal documents and interviews with drug agents and foreign officials who participated in Libertador show that: The DEA could not account for 375 of the 2,876 arrests attributed to Libertador. For most of the rest, it relied on numbers reported by participating countries. The largest number of arrests -- 996 -- were in Jamaica, where authorities said most of them were for misdemeanor marijuana possession. Much of the marijuana interdiction credited to Libertador consisted of plants that had been burned in Jamaica and already counted as part of a State Department's eradication effort under way since 1982. No one cared much about drug intelligence-gathering. The DEA did not, as a rule, ask for the names of those arrested, the outcomes of their cases or what happened to their drugs and cash. DEA spokesman Michael Chapman said his agency saw no problems with Libertador or its operations accounting system. ``Everything was done properly and aboveboard,'' he said after discussing the Washington Bureau's investigation with DEA Administrator Donnie Marshall. Chapman said his agency would ``stick by the reported arrests, because those were the numbers that were called in'' by foreign law-enforcement officials. Vigil, the overseer of Libertador and the three previous Caribbean anti-drug initiatives, said the names and numbers were not very important. ``The key here is that we have 36 countries that put aside cultural, political and economic differences to come together,'' Vigil said. A former DEA senior official who ran similar operations in Central and South America said Libertador's records were seriously flawed. ``It's ridiculous if the names aren't included,'' he said on condition that he not be identified. ``I'm not surprised at all that the statistics reported are unverifiable,'' said Eric Sterling, a former counsel on drug policy to the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee. Sterling, now president of the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation in Washington, which advocates prevention and treatment measures to combat the drug problem, continued: ``Distortions in the government's reporting of drug operations are commonplace. . . . Congress and agency managers hunger for success stories to brag about.'' Libertador began at 6 a.m. Oct. 27 and ended at midnight Nov. 19. Nearly every nation in the Caribbean participated, along with major Latin American cocaine-trafficking countries such as Colombia, Bolivia and Mexico. The biggest success credited by Vigil and DEA documents to Libertador was alleged trafficker Martires Paulino Castro, who was arrested by Dominican police. Seized in the process were $30 million in Paulino's assets and 360 kilograms of cocaine. The DEA's own records contradict that claim, however. Vigil's DEA office in San Juan first reported Paulino's arrest Sept. 29, nearly a month before Libertador began. Vigil said Paulino's inclusion was justified because Paulino had been identified in a list of suspected drug traffickers that was provided to Dominican officials in the planning stages of Libertador. DEA's Libertador reports also take credit for cutting down and burning 900,183 marijuana plants, many in Jamaica. But Carl Williams, head of that nation's narcotics squad, said the eradication campaign, which has been under way since 1982, is sponsored by the State Department. The DEA bought into the effort, he said, by contributing $5,000. Williams said most of Jamaica's 996 arrests during Libertador were for misdemeanor marijuana possession or smoking it in public. ``The criteria for success or failure of our drug policy depends on being able to say you arrested somebody,'' said Ethan Nadelman, who heads the Lindesmith Center, which advocated treatment over arrests. It ``has essentially nothing to do with the drug problem in the U.S. or with the flow of drugs into the U.S. Did the operation have any impact whatsoever on the price or availability of drugs? Did it have any impact whatsoever on the number of people addicted to or overdosing from heroin or cocaine? The odds are overwhelmingly no.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Terry F