Pubdate: Sat, 26 May 2001 Source: Belleville News-Democrat (IL) Copyright: 2001 Belleville News-Democrat Contact: http://www.bnd.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1185 Author: Brian Brueggemann POLICE FIND DRUGS IN SHIPMENTS FedEx Hub Search Produces Results Collinsville - Police who've been searching through packages at a FedEx hub in Collinsville have found some major drug shipments lately, including a stash of cocaine and four 5-gallon buckets full of marijuana. But they've also opened a package to find only drapes and a dress. Collinsville Police, known for their intensive efforts to catch drug traffickers on the local interstate, are now looking for suspicious packages passing through the FedEx hub in Collinsville. The hub is in an industrial park near Illinois 157 and Interstate 70. In recent weeks, judges have issued eight search warrants that allowed Collinsville Police to open packages at the hub and look for drugs. Police Chief Gerrit Gillespie declined to discuss specifics of the operation, but he said it's been successful. All of the searches have resulted in the discovery of drugs, except for the one involving the drapes and dress and one in which an undisclosed amount of cash was found. Gillespie said an officer goes to the FedEx building only periodically, for less than two hours at a time. The search warrants indicate that in seven of the eight cases, Officer Terry Wasser discovered suspicious packages while stationed at the hub on seven different dates, beginning April 11. In the eighth case, a FedEx employee discovered a suspicious package and called police. Madison County Public Defender John Rekowski, who has been a critic of Collinsville Police tactics, said the operation sounds like a waste of police resources. "We're in a situation where we have a town where we could use officers on the street. They always say they're understaffed, and now they have somebody stationed at a FedEx office," he said. Rekowski also criticized FedEx. "If that's FedEx's policy, to let the police search packages and read addresses and stuff, I think I'll ship UPS," he said. Affidavits in the search warrants offer a glimpse into how the operation works. A package can become suspicious if it's heavily taped, if it's shipped from a drug-source state such as Texas or California, if the shipper's address is bogus, or if the shipping costs are high in relation to the value of the items supposedly being shipped. Once a package is determined to be suspicious, a drug-sniffing dog is brought in to see whether it will make an alert on the package. In the case of the drapes and dress, Collinsville resident Jeff Thurman shipped the package to his mother-in-law, Denice LaSuite, in Saskatchewan, Canada. In an affidavit requesting the search warrant, police stated that the package was heavily taped, was being shipped from a market area for drugs to a source area for drugs, and that the shipper paid $48.36 to have the package sent overnight even though the total value claimed for the items was only $110. A drug-sniffing dog then made a positive alert on the package. LaSuite said she's not offended that police opened her package. "Not at all," she said. "How are you supposed to prevent people from shipping illegal things?" LaSuite said the dog possibly alerted on the drapes and dress because they were packaged in a Pop-Tarts box. "That's probably what it smelled -- the food," she said. Carla Richards, a FedEx spokesman, said it's not uncommon for FedEx -- or its competitors -- to cooperate in police investigations. "I don't think I can make a blanket statement as to whether this is common or not. We don't go into great detail about our security work," Richards said. "We certainly cooperate with authorities and we work very closely with them -- we see it as one of our duties. As far as the privacy issue, I would refer you back to the police." The drugs amounts found in the searches are: 5 pounds of marijuana, 9 grams of marijuana, 5 pounds of marijuana, 10 pounds of marijuana, 62 pounds of marijuana in four 5-gallon buckets, 275 grams of cocaine. Prosecutors asked that other details of the seizures not be disclosed because most of the cases remain under investigation. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth