Pubdate: Sat, 30 Mar 2002 Source: Oakland Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2002 ANG Newspapers Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/314 Website: http://www.oaklandtribune.com/ Author: Justin Jouvenal AIRPORT SECURITY CUTS DRUG TRAFFICKING, OFFICIALS SAY M-16 toting troops, sniffer dogs and extra security since Sept. 11 may have scared drug traffickers away from Bay Area airports, cutting to a trickle illicit smuggling operations, law enforcement officials say. Since the terrorist attacks, drug seizures have plummeted to unprecedented levels at San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose airports, while the number of drug arrests is sharply down. "We're seizing grams instead of pounds," said Richard Meyer, a special agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration. "Traffickers aren't dumb. Obviously they've seen security and shifted their operations." Airport smuggling is usually done by "drug mules," people paid hundreds or thousands of dollars by traffickers to ferry shipments from city to city or country to country, officials say. The mules stash marijuanua blocks of up to 60 pounds in suitcases. Heroin or cocaine are often strapped around their bodies, hidden in pouches in private parts or shoes, or ingested in wax pills then later expelled. New airport security measures -- from scanning all checked bags to shoe inspections -- make these smuggling methods much more dicey, Meyer said. The increasing risk is reflected in the lack of drug seizures and arrests. DEA agents have not found any shipments of heroin at Bay Area airports since Sept. 11, Meyer said. Cocaine seizures are off 50 percent or more, and agents have only uncovered small amounts of marijuana and methamphetamine. In an average year, agents recover roughly six pounds of heroin and methamphetamine, about two pounds of cocaine and several hundred pounds of marijuana. Drug trafficking arrests at San Francisco International have remained steady, while arrests at Mineta-San Jose are off 57 percent and arrests at Oakland have dropped 80 percent. DEA officials have refused to release hard numbers for drugs seized or arrests made, saying it could interfere with ongoing investigations. DEA and U.S. Customs Service officials say the drop in airport smuggling has not affected street supplies much. The three airports account for only a small fraction of the drugs flowing into the Bay area. "The ground zero for drug trafficking is the Mexican border," said Mike Fleming, spokesman for U.S. Customs in Los Angeles. At the border, cocaine seizures doubled and heroin seizures increased twentyfold between October and December over the same period in 2000. Fleming attributes the increase to the vigilance of U.S. Customs agents, who have been on "code red" alert since Sept. 11. "The more you look, the more you find," he said. It's not clear whether the decrease in airport trafficking in the Bay area is related to the increased seizures at the Mexican border or whether drug smugglers are finding other ways to sneak drugs into the Bay Area. The decline has left drug-sniffing dogs, such as SFO's Elway, with little reward for their hard work, while airport drug enforcement task forces have increasingly turned their attention to nonairport stings. One DEA agent, who asked not to be identified, said the respite in trafficking will likely only be temporary. "After the Gulf War, we also saw a short-lived decline in trafficking," he said. "Distributing drugs and drug money by air is so efficient, I'm sure we will see it increase again." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk