Pubdate: Sun, 06 Jan 2002 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: 2002 The Observer Contact: http://www.observer.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/315 Author: Tony Thompson TERRORIST ATTACKS DROVE JAMAICAN DRUG MULES TO UK Tony Thompson In Kingston Investigates How Police Are Failing To Halt A Growing Trade Fuelled By Poverty The air conditioning in the dilapidated courthouse has not worked for years but protocol still dictates that those addressing the magistrate must wear jackets and ties. In the stifling heat of court number five in Kingston's Half Way Tree district, Detective Constable Conrad Granston repeatedly mopped his brow last week as he explained why he had immediate suspicions about Diane Haddow. After opening her suitcase, he found 33 plastic bottles of medicated powder. 'I thought to myself this can't be right, nobody should need that much. She told me her daughter suffered from a severe skin complaint and that she had bought it to treat her, but it still didn't make sense.' Granston cut one bottle open and found three pellets, each wrapped in black plastic. The pellets contained cocaine and almost all the other bottles had similar contents. Haddow, a 22-year-old from Tottenham in north London, was arrested at Norman Manley Airport in Kingston on Wednesday night as she prepared to board an Air Jamaica flight to London. Her suitcase contained around a kilo of high quality cocaine. Haddow is the latest British citizen to be arrested for suspected drug trafficking in Jamaica, but her alleged crime was far from unusual. At least seven other cases in the court last Friday morning involved couriers arrested en route to London since the beginning of the year. They included a woman who had swallowed 99 pellets of cocaine and a man who attempted to smuggle cannabis in a false compartment in his suitcase. While the majority of those caught are Jamaican, the number of Britons involved is growing fast. Last March, 48 British citizens were being held in Jamaican jails. Today that figure has climbed to 150. Last week the UK's Deputy High Commissioner in Jamaica, Phil Sinkinson, ignited a political row by claiming that as many as one in 10 passengers on flights from Jamaica to Britain was attempting to smuggle drugs. However, according to police officers on the trail of the mules, such estimates are conservative and the true figure on certain flights could be as high as 80 per cent. The first thing visitors to the headquarters of the Narcotics Division of the Jamaican Constabulary notice is the lack of computers. Essential information such as fingerprint files and criminal records are still written by hand on index cards. From his sparsely furnished office Superintendent Gladstone Wright is the first to admit that he and his officers need help to tackle the increasingly sophisticated drug smuggling centre that Jamaica has become. The smugglers are becoming more dynamic and the trade is growing all the time,' he said. 'In terms of what is happening in Britain, the trade has escalated sharply since 11 September. The couriers who would normally be travelling to America are unable to get their drugs through because security at the borders has become so tight. Cocaine is stockpiling in Jamaica and that is no good for the dealers - there is no viable market for the drug here. So it is all being diverted to Britain.' In December, 23 drug mules were caught on a single Air Jamaica flight into Heathrow. A week later a further 19 were caught on a BA flight into Gatwick. Both aircraft were targeted for checks at random. Before 11 September, 50 per cent of all drugs intercepted from airline passengers arriving in the United States were seized from flights from Jamaica, despite such flights making up less than 3 per cent of US air traffic. Wright believes that much of this activity is now being directed towards Britain and that as much as 65 per cent of all the cocaine in the UK was smuggled through Jamaica. 'Becoming a drug mule is the most readily available form of employment in this country at the moment,' he said. 'It is a job that you do not need to be interviewed for or have any kind of qualifications, but you can earn more money than most Jamaicans see in a lifetime. The economy here is very bad at the moment and unemployment among women is running at 22 per cent. These people are easy prey for the dealers.' Those who swallow pellets of cocaine receive the most publicity but the smugglers are also using a wide variety of other techniques, some of them highly sophisticated. In recent weeks cocaine has been found sewn into the seams of trousers, suspended in liquids, concealed in the soles of shoes and hidden in the handles of suitcases. On New Year's Day a woman was arrested at Norman Manley Airport with half a kilo of cocaine weaved into her hair. The 'body packers' prepare themselves for their smuggling trips by swallowing whole grapes. The money they are paid is directly related to the number of pellets they are able to swallow. The average mule will carry around 30 but there have been cases where people have swallowed more than 120. The pellets - each two inches long and half an inch wide - are often dipped in honey to ease their passage down the gullet. The mules will take tablets to induce constipation during the course of the trip. In earlier years the cocaine was stored in condoms but the fingers of surgical gloves, which are made of latex and are more sturdy, are the current material of choice. The cocaine is compressed and formed into pellets using a machine which supposedly ensures an airtight seal. Despite this, dozens of couriers have had to be rushed to hospital after becoming ill while waiting to board planes at Kingston. At least 10 have died as a result of packages bursting inside them in the past year. Police and customs officials in Britain and Jamaica admit that a significant proportion of mules do get through. Once they have cleared customs in Britain they travel to pre-arranged addresses where they are given laxatives to help them expel the packages. But, according to Wright, his officers do not even attempt to catch all the drug smugglers before they board flights to the UK. 'It is relatively easy to spot the novices. The people with cocaine strapped to their bodies look bulky or have an unusual gait, while those who have swallowed for the first time are often visibly nervous and panic-stricken. The problem is that we simply do not have the resources to deal with swallowers. 'When we identify them they have to be taken to hospital and placed under guard until the cocaine passes through their system. That can take up to six days and we do not have the manpower to cope with that. We would never knowingly let someone board a plane who we suspected of having swallowed cocaine, but I am certain that we could catch many more people if we had more resources to devote.' The entire Jamaican Narcotics Division is staffed by just 130 officers. By comparison 150 detectives investigated the murder of Jill Dando. Wright plans to expand the division to a staff of more than 200 but while having more officers will undoubtedly help, Wright acknowledges that the police themselves are a part of the problem. Corrupt officers have been known to transport drugs in their own vehicles, to block off roads to allow planes to take off and land and to turn a blind eye to shipments being smuggled out of the country in return for bribes. In January 1999, 127 officers in the Portland Division were transferred after allegations that some had formed an alliance with members of a Colombian cocaine cartel. Eight months later the entire Special Anti-Crime Taskforce was disbanded after some of its officers were found to be selling drugs. More recently police officers have been caught selling gun licences to drug dealers and helping smugglers to get hold of false passports for their couriers. For the honest, dedicated officers the tainted reputation only serves to make their job even harder. An officer for 18 years, Sergeant Adele Halliman has spent the last six years specialising in narcotics and is now Jamaica's top mule buster. Like Gene Hackman's character in The French Connection, she believes she has a sixth sense that alerts her whenever a courier is around. 'I guess I have a gift. It's hard for me to explain exactly how it works but I just get a sense when someone is carrying contraband, and I am never wrong.' Last week Halliman arrested yet another British citizen, Michael Edwards, as he boarded a flight to London after a 10-day holiday in Jamaica. His luggage included a bottle of Sorrell, a local drink made from flower petals, which aroused her suspicions. 'There was something about the colour that wasn't right so I checked more closely. It turned out to be liquid cocaine.' Halliman spends much of her time in the departure lounge of Norman Manley Airport at the x-ray machines that scan every item of a passenger's luggage even before they reach the check-in desk. In the past six months she and her team, which includes DC Granston and two other detectives, have arrested more than 150 mules. She has little doubt that many more manage to slip through the net and believes that on certain flights, at certain times of the year the number of passengers attempting to smuggle contraband is as high as eight in 10. 'It's a lottery, some people will bring through five pieces of luggage hoping we won't have time to search them all. Others have just one piece because they believe they will look more innocent, we have even had people using their children in an attempt to distract us.' The frustration Halliman feels at not having the resources to do a more effective job pales alongside that which comes from seeing how the Jamaican judicial system deals with those who are caught. Sentences are remarkably light, especially compared with Britain where even a first-time mule can expect to serve a minimum of six years. As Halliman waited out side court to supervise Diane Haddow's transfer to a holding centre, she was informed that another British drugs mule, Lisa Walker, was to be released from prison later that day. Halliman remembered her well: she arrested Walker attempting to smuggle two kilograms of cocaine out of the country just nine months ago. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart