Pubdate: Mon, 04 Feb 2002 Source: Yankton Daily Press & Dakotan (SD) Copyright: 2000 Yankton Daily Press & Dakotan Contact: http://www.yankton.net Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1046 Author: Carson Walker, Associated Press Writer AUTHORITIES SAY I-90 BECOMING WEST-TO-EAST DRUG CORRIDOR DEADWOOD -- The nation's war on drugs now cuts across South Dakota as more drug smugglers drive Interstate 90 to haul dope from the West Coast, state authorities say. The case of Alfredo "Pedro" Chavez, 32, is a prime example, authorities said in court documents. The illegal immigrant from Mexico was pulled over by a South Dakota Highway Patrol trooper in Spearfish in September 2000. A search yielded a hidden compartment in his gas tank that contained 18 pounds of cocaine -- the largest such seizure in the state at that time. Authorities also found about a pound of methamphetamine and 4 pounds of marijuana, court documents said. Chavez said he was traveling from Seattle to North Carolina. His case was thrown out of federal court on grounds the stop and search were illegal. But he is scheduled to stand trial March 13 in Deadwood on state drug possession charges. Lawrence County State's Attorney John Fitzgerald won't talk about the Chavez case because of the pending trial. But he said that in 21 years of being a prosecutor in Butte and Lawrence counties, he's seen more drug trafficking along I-90. "This was a giant case," Fitzgerald said of the Chavez case at a December hearing in Deadwood. "This is a giant amount of drugs coming through on I-90." Chavez had been deported from the United States and has "come back across the border repeatedly to smuggle drugs for a living," the prosecutor said in court. Chavez "is a drug smuggler working for cartels that import large quantities of heroin and cocaine into the country," he said. Fitzgerald said it's not just the drugs he knows about that concern him -- but the drugs he doesn't know about. Authorities are catching 1 percent or less of the drugs moving on I-90, he said. Drug couriers are more likely to be arrested on Interstates 70 and 80 to the south because there are more law enforcement officers and drug dogs patrolling those thoroughfares. That means more smugglers are using I-90, he said. "Because we have so little law enforcement and drug dogs, they're smuggling drugs across the state every day, large quantities," Fitzgerald said at the hearing. "It's not uncommon. It's just hard to catch them." He and Col. Tom Dravland, South Dakota Highway Patrol superintendent, said drug dogs are the only way to catch most smugglers. "That's why we got them because if you're running drugs, you generally don't leave it on the seat of your car as you're going down the road. You put it in a bag in the trunk or build secret compartments in the car," Dravland said. The patrol started the canine program in 1991 with two dogs and now has 11 dogs with troopers stationed around the state. Officers need a reason to stop a vehicle for a traffic violation but then can use dogs if they suspect something, he said. Dravland said a federal grant covers the $50,000 to $60,000 annual cost of the canine program. It's worth it, he said. From 1998 through 2001 alone, the Highway Patrol drug dogs led troopers to arrest people for 3,510 crimes, Dravland said. That includes multiple crimes against some of the same people and doesn't include those arrested by local law enforcement agencies assisted by the patrol, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake