Pubdate: Fri, 31 May 2002 Source: Charleston Gazette (WV) Copyright: 2002 Charleston Gazette Contact: http://www.wvgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/77 Author: Lawrence Messina Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?203 (Terrorism) FBI TO REASSIGN 518 W.VA. AGENTS TO COMBAT TERRORISM The FBI has never ranked West Virginia among its most crucial assignments, and now plans to reassign 518 of its agents nationwide to combat terrorism. But U.S. Attorney Kasey Warner does not believe a retooled FBI and Department of Justice will spell an end to such local federal successes as the First National Bank of Keystone case. "I haven't heard that they're going to pull a bunch of our agents to send them to these so-called hotbeds," Warner said Thursday. "I don't think we'll see any immediate impact that will hamper our current law enforcement investigations." Warner is the DOJ's top official in the busiest and most populous of the state's two federal court districts. He watched Wednesday's press conference by his boss, Attorney General John Ashcroft, and FBI Director Robert Mueller. Mueller detailed plans for a "redesigned and refocused" FBI, with a focus on "preventing terrorist attacks." Besides creating "flying squads" and a national "Joint Terrorism Task Force," the FBI will recruit hundreds of new agents and "permanently shift additional resources to counterterrorism." Before Sept. 11, the FBI had assigned 153 agents to counterterrorism, including 41 supervisors. Mueller would increase that number to 682 agents, with 416 in the field, within four years. To accomplish that, the FBI will re-assign 400 agents now investigating drug cases, 59 investigating white-collar crimes and 59 investigating violence crime - the sorts of cases that cadre of FBI assigned to West Virginia currently handle. Federal officials dislike giving specific numbers about their agents in the field. Previously, federal prosecutors in the state have lamented a chronic shortage of agents from the FBI as well as the Internal Revenue Service and the Drug Enforcement Administration. These investigators, particularly from the FBI, IRS and Treasury Department, contributed toward the prosecution of the handful of executives blamed for the 1999 collapse of the Keystone bank and related fraud. They have also pursued the political corruption cases against ex-Gov. Arch Moore and, most recently, former state Sen. Randy Schoonover. Other cases range from the health care-fraud conviction of hospital chief C. David Morrison and sweeping prosecutions of crack cocaine, methamphetamine and OxyContin dealers. "I would love to have more FBI agents in the southern district, but haven't said that," Warner said. "I am sure that the rest of the U.S. Attorneys in the court believe the same thing about their districts." The FBI has typically assigned most of the area's agents to its larger cities, such as its regional headquarters in Pittsburgh. Counterterrorism agents will likely be deployed in New York and the Washington, D.C., area, for starters. "Right now, at this point, southern West Virginia does not appear to be among the hotbeds of terrorism," Warner said. "The terrorist threat has to be job No. 1. I don't see, in southern West Virginia, that threat at this time." Warner had already focused his office on a post-Sept. 11 environment even before Wednesday's press conference. He wants to ensure that terrorists traveling on expired or revoked visas don't seek refuse as college students in the state. He also believes the drug trade, even in West Virginia, bankrolls international terrorist groups. "Yes, we have programs in place, we have a task force operating, but it's not draining our office and it's not draining the FBI here at this point," Warner said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh