Pubdate: Fri, 24 May 2002 Source: Newsday (NY) Copyright: 2002 Newsday Inc. Contact: http://www.newsday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/308 Author: Larry Neumeister, Associated Press POLICE COMMISSIONER PREDICTS 2-TON DRUG BUST WILL CURTAIL VIOLENT CRIME NEW YORK -- Two tons of cocaine found in a warehouse in Brooklyn was described Friday as a "historic seizure" _ the largest confiscation of drugs in New York by law enforcement authorities in at least five years. "This is a major blow against narcotics trafficking in New York City," said police Commissioner Raymond Kelly at an afternoon news conference to announce the seizure and the arrest of four men. He said the discovery Thursday night during a surveillance in the Park Slope section would have a ripple effect on crime in the city. "Just think of the amount of violence that would occur over 2 tons of cocaine and the lives impacted by it," Kelly said. "Narcotics is at the core of violence. We've seen that for many years." He said it was the largest drug seizure in at least five years and one of the largest he could recall. "This is a historic seizure," Kelly said. The raid on the warehouse came after members of the New York Drug Enforcement Task Force watched a car involved in previous narcotics investigations enter a warehouse and later leave with a heavily weighted rear section, according to Assistant Special Agent Victor Pedalino of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. The warehouse was searched after 464 kilograms of cocaine were found in black garbage bags and black suitcases in the car, he said. The rest of the drugs were found in secret compartments inside two 20-foot trucks parked in the warehouse, he said. Two men were arrested in the car and two others were arrested in the warehouse. New York City Special Narcotics Prosecutor Bridget G. Brennan said the drug seizure showed that the public attention since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks had been diverted but that the "problem of narcotics has not gone away" and neither has law enforcement's attack on it. She said more drugs had already been seized in the city than was seized all of last year. Kelly said a citywide attack on drugs included a focus on the northern section of Manhattan, where more than 1,000 low-level drug dealers and their customers had been arrested in recent weeks. He said he suspected the aggressive approach to investigating the drug trade had contributed to a 7 percent drop in overall crime in the city in 2002 and a more than 20 percent fall in the murder rate. Even so, the size of Thursday's seizure was not expected. "They anticipated a seizure but I think they were pleasantly surprised," he said of investigators. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex