Pubdate: Sat, 6 Apr 2002 Source: Austin American-Statesman (TX) Website: http://www.austin360.com/aas/metro/040602/6taskforce.html Copyright: 2002 Austin American-Statesman Contact: http://www.austin360.com/statesman/editions/today/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/32 Author: Eileen E. Flynn TRAVIS COUNTY LEAVING ANTI-DRUG TASK FORCE Sheriff Says Officers Can Work Better Outside Of Shrinking Group With four of its five partners abandoning a Travis County-led anti-drug coalition, Sheriff Margo Frasier has been forced to pull out of the Capital Area Narcotics Task Force - a dwindling consortium of Central Texas agencies involved in two deadly drug raids in little more than a year. Frasier said Friday that despite the loss of her partners, she already had made up her mind to yank her officers from the troubled unit that was never "as successful as it could have been." A state official said Frasier had no choice. The county's withdrawal means that just more than $600,000 that would largely have been spent fighting drug trafficking in Travis County now will be spent on anti-drug efforts in surrounding rural counties and for substance abuse programs in Travis County. The Travis County sheriff's office had led the six-county group since January 2000. Of the 417 task force operations conducted in 2000 and 2001, 208 of them were in Travis County. From June 2000 through May 2001, the task force filed 131 felony charges and seized about $2.8 million in narcotics and more than $223,000 in cash assets. The numbers dropped from June 2001 through the rest of the year, with 81 felony cases yielding around $565,000 in narcotics and $37,729 in seized assets. "I just felt it would make for better supervision and control if we just deal with the issues in Travis County and not try to solve the problems in other places," Frasier said. "I think we operated it as efficiently as we could. The problem is it's just too large a geographical area with too few people." Jay Kimbrough, director of the governor's criminal justice division, said Travis County's withdrawal was inevitable because officials in Caldwell County, one of the three remaining participants in the task force, had recently indicated that they wanted to collaborate on narcotics enforcement with other rural counties. The criminal justice division combines state and federal money to support more than 40 regional anti-drug coalitions around the state. Caldwell's departure would have brought an end to the Central Texas task force because the only counties that would have remained - Travis and Fayette - are not contiguous, and the state's rules will not fund a single-county enforcement team. Fayette County Sheriff Rick Vandel could not be reached for comment Friday. In January, Bastrop County Sheriff Richard Hernandez announced his withdrawal, saying that two deputies he had on the team were not spending enough time in his county "We weren't getting nearly what I wanted for our money's worth," he said. In 2001, Williamson and Lee counties left the task force. Kimbrough said it's understandable that sheriffs would not want to devote personnel to an operation primarily conducted in another county. "I think what happens is the rural communities ultimately recognize that their issues and needs are somewhat different from the major metropolitan areas," he said. "Coordination for them is a much more complex issue than it is for the people in the urban areas." In February, Frasier said a large share of task force operations were conducted in Travis County because it was the largest of the group and is a hub of drug trafficking in Central Texas. Over the past 14 months, the task force has been embroiled in controversy and tragedy. The deaths of Travis County sheriff's Deputy Keith Ruiz, who was shot during a raid in Del Valle in February 2001, and 19-year-old Tony Martinez, killed by a deputy during a raid in December, sparked public outcry over the aggressive SWAT team methods. Last May, Travis County deputies raided a Spicewood home and were later accused in a civil rights lawsuit of mistaking ragweed for marijuana and holding residents at gunpoint. Frasier said those incidents, while they made officials reassess their methods, did not force the end of the task force. "I don't think the participation in the task force was the reason for either one of those tragedies," she said. "What it said to me was, this is an area where I really want supervisors to not be spread thin." State Rep. Terry Keel, R-Austin, a former Travis County sheriff, lauded Frasier's decision. "I think it is a good development that this task force has collapsed under its own weight," he said. It was a decision Keel himself made almost immediately after becoming sheriff in 1992. At that time, he said, the county had outgrown its place in a regional unit, which was created to provide enforcement in rural areas. Keel also questioned the unit's effectiveness and professionalism and found that collaborating with Austin Police Department's narcotics division was more productive. "(The sheriff's office) should try to re-establish a joint narcotics unit with (Austin police)," Keel said. "In my opinion, it was a mistake for the sheriff's office . . . to forego that joint program and instead get back into a problem program." Frasier said her agency works closely with police departments around the county. Over the past year, Travis County residents have complained to the county Commissioners Court and called for an end to SWAT teams and aggressive drug raids. Some showed up at Tuesday meetings to voice outrage. Others sent postcards. County Judge Sam Biscoe said he received about 100 cards with the same message. "They didn't believe county money should be spent to support projects such as those SWAT teams initiatives," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth