Pubdate: Wed, 31 Jul 2002 Source: Post and Courier, The (SC) Copyright: 2002 Evening Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.charleston.net/index.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/567 Author: Christopher Newton, of the Associated Press FBI DIRECTOR ANNOUNCES FIGHT AGAINST DRUGS NO LONGER AGENCY'S TOP PRIORITY WASHINGTON-FBI director Robert Mueller said Tuesday that the war on terrorism demands that the FBI pull agents away from narcotics task forces and no longer make drug enforcement a top priority. The comments, which came at the 20th anniversary celebration for the Organized Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Force, followed statements by Attorney General John Ashcroft reaffirming that the drug war would be reorganized but not abandoned. Ashcroft said law enforcement agencies have created a "most wanted list" of 54 drug organizations that must be toppled here and abroad. The list will allow crime fighters to focus their resources, Ashcroft said. But the FBI will be less involved in the effort because of the shift toward preventing terror attacks and gathering information on terror groups in the United States,_ Mueller said Tuesday. "We ought to defer to the Drug Enforcement Agency on cartel cases," Mueller said. "We will still participate but with fewer resources. Where there were 10 (FBI agents) on a drug task force in the past, now there will be five." Mueller listed stopping terror attacks, counterintelligence and undermining strikes at the nation's computer networks as the FBI's new top three priorities. He listed corporate crime investigations as another major draw on the FBI's resources. Mueller has spoken before about the need to reallocate resources away from narcotics enforcement, but Tuesday's comments were the strongest yet. "(Sept. 11) has required us to look at our resources and make hard choices," Mueller said. "That is the bottom line for us - participate (in drug enforcement) but not in the ways we have in the past." About 400 agents will be taken from narcotics efforts and placed on counterterrorism task forces, Mueller said. There are 11,324 agents in the FBI. The agency will focus on assisting narcotics enforcement when it intersects with terrorism and in attempts to financially disrupt drug cartels. Reaction to the message was mixed. John Fernandes, an assistant director of the DEA in Los Angeles, said that the shift will not lead to more drugs on the streets. "We are broadening the war on drugs and looking for ways to fight smarter, instead of harder," Fernandes said. "We are getting better at sharing intelligence and resources to compensate." Jim Schweitzer, special agent in charge of the FBI's Columbia office, said South Carolina would lose a percentage of agents who investigate drug cases if Congress approves the director's plan. He does not know, however, how many of the 70 agents statewide would be assigned to the war on terror. "In South Carolina, every agent is vital, and losing an agent (from drug cases) will be a loss, but we are working harder every day to work closer with our state and local partners in all areas of investigations of drugs, violence and cyber crime," Schweitzer said. Seattle police officer Mike Helton said the FBI's diminished presence would hamper efforts. "Fighting the drug war will be harder without the extra manpower of the FBI - - there is no way around it," Helton said. "This is a signal that drugs aren't the most important thing anymore and that will be reflected out across America." Ashcroft said the Bush administration is committed to the drug war. "I reject the notion that a nation founded on the ideals of freedom can willfully abandon the goal of defeating drugs," Ashcroft said. "We will defeat drugs." The focus on terrorism has shifted the way law enforcement officers plan to fight the drug war, with more concentration on cartel finances and organizations. DEA Administrator Asa Hutchinson said the agency is seeking new training for agents and analysts and 20 special agents for money laundering cases. Other agency chiefs who spoke at the conference alluded to the shift away from fighting drugs. Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Thomas Collins said efforts aimed at narcotics enforcement fell by 90 percent after Sept. 11. Coast Guard officials said the current figure is about 5 percent lower than pre-Sept. 11 levels. But the number of drug seizures has increased, Collins said, because of searches aimed at stopping terrorists. "These are not battles that must be fought separately," Collins said, noting that two of the Coast Guard's largest cocaine seizures happened after Sept. 11. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel