Pubdate: Tue, 06 Aug 2002 Source: Athens Banner-Herald (GA) Copyright: 2002 Athens Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.onlineathens.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1535 Author: Stephen Gurr COCAINE SEIZED IN FRANKLIN COUNTY Stash Worth $12.7 Million, Authorities Estimate Franklin County authorities made a stunning discovery when they found 108 cellophane-wrapped packages hidden in plain sight in the otherwise empty cargo hold of a tractor-trailer truck: 237 pounds of pure cocaine. The Sunday afternoon seizure at the Petro Truckstop off Interstate 85 near Carnesville marked the biggest drug bust in the Northeast Georgia county's history, though chances are the cargo was headed for Atlanta. "That's a lot of dope," said Franklin County Sheriff Hugh Roach, who gave credit to the Piedmont-Northern Multi-Agency Narcotics Squad for temporarily clogging an artery of the Southeast's drug trade. "They did accomplish something by getting it off the street. It means it ain't going to some kid somewhere." The cocaine, 108 kilograms of uncut white powder, was valued by members of the drug squad at $12.7 million. It wasn't the state's biggest drug seizure; Georgia State Patrol troopers working I-85 in West Georgia's Troup County have more than once intercepted shipments in excess of 110 kilos. Authorities said they arrested two people after the 4 p.m. search, but they weren't releasing their names Monday, citing an ongoing investigation. They also wouldn't say what led them to search the truck or who was involved in the initial search. One suspect, the driver of the truck, is in federal custody in Macon, where he was taken early Monday after the federal Drug Enforcement Agency was called in, DEA spokeswoman Eldred Earls said. Another suspect is awaiting extradition from South Carolina, where he fled and was eventually captured after the search began, authorities said. Large interstate cocaine shipments typically have scout vehicles that run ahead of trucks and sometimes provide distractions when police get involved. Authorities would not say if that was the case in Sunday's incident. The tractor-trailer truck, like many others involved in cocaine trafficking, had Texas license plates, Franklin County Sheriff's Investigator Jimmy LeCroy said. The driver wasn't telling authorities where he was heading, LeCroy said. "Somebody's looking for him and the stuff, I'm sure," LeCroy said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth