Pubdate: Thu, 14 Aug 2003 Source: Tyler Morning Telegraph (TX) Copyright: 2003 T.B. Butler Publishing Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.tylerpaper.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1669 Author: Jacque Hilburn Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) EAST TEXAS DRUG WARRANT SWEEP CLEANUP CONTINUES As the dust settles after Wednesday's federal warrant sweep, local authorities are left to sweep up. But little relief is expected from the cleanup of Operation Wide Open, however, as law enforcement officers on Thursday continued tracking down the remaining suspects sought in dozens of state and federal drug warrants. At the request of Smith County's sheriff, the Drug Enforcement Administration last year joined local authorities in helping investigate and infiltrate a growing number of East Texas drug trafficking rings. As of Wednesday, authorities had linked more than 70 people to the illegal activity. Convictions for some defendants could result in life sentences and millions of dollars in fines, officials said. "As we speak, there are only seven people who have not been arrested or have turned themselves in," said Maj. Mike Lusk, Smith County Sheriff's Office. Hearings in state and federal courtrooms are expected to continue until next week. Identities of all those arrested will be released after their arraignment in court. Meanwhile, at Smith County Jail, authorities are looking for space for the continuing flow of arrestees. "If they bring them to jail, we have to find a place for them," said Capt. Gary Pinkerton. "As of Thursday, we were at 749 - we have space for 756. We're going to have to handle them, one way or another." That could prove challenging in the coming days. A day after the areawide raid, Sheriff J.B. Smith expressed no plans for a slowdown. "We've worked on this project for months," said Sheriff J.B. Smith. "It actually began around a year and a half ago after we began seeing trends in our crimes. We were talking to our patrolmen, who were seeing connections between many crimes. "We found about 80 percent of all violent crimes in our area - rape, armed robbery, murder, burglary and theft - were directly linked to drugs," the sheriff said. "We were really troubled by what we saw. Yesterday was just the beginning - we're not finished." Concerned over how to battle the growing frequency of these violent crimes and drug arrests, the sheriff and his officers last year sought federal aid to deal with the problem. Requesting and receiving aid were two different things, however. Officials said they had to first demonstrate to federal authorities there was collaboration between the two. "Drugs had become the scourge of our society," Smith said. "It was affecting our communities and our families. We knew something had to be done, but as a small agency, we just didn't have enough resources to do it." With the assistance of local DEA officials and others, sheriff's officials produced volumes of investigative data to support the request for assistance. Federal officials agreed there was a tremendous drug problem in Smith County and approved the additional aid, officials said. A team of DEA agents comprising the MET team, short for Mobile Enforcement Team, arrived in December, bringing personnel and funding available to infiltrate several pockets of top-ranking drug distributors, officials said. Working with sheriff's detectives and other law enforcement officials, agents helped identify suspects and build cases against them, spending in excess of $175,000 in federal dollars to conduct controlled drug buys. Through the course of the nine-month long investigation, authorities seized large quantities of crack cocaine, hydrochloride, methamphetamine, ephedrine, Xanax, ecstasy, marijuana, multiple gallons of meth oil, one working lab, several weapons and about $47,000 in cash, officials said. On Wednesday, the fruits of their labors emerged. An early morning roundup conducted by 150 federal and local officers struck in a simultaneous, countywide warrant sweep. Tyler Police Department and agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, FBI, IRS, U.S. Marshals Service and Northeast Texas Narcotics Task Force joined to help complete the project. Twelve of 14 people indicted on federal drug or conspiracy charges were taken into custody during the 6 a.m. area roundup; most of the remaining 64 sought on state indictments surfaced by day's end. On Wednesday alone, authorities seized stolen weapons, $2,770 in cash, a large amount of marijuana and a vehicle used to carry out drug transactions. Officials called the probe a "dramatic accomplishment" for federal, state and local agencies and East Texas. "This coordinated effort shows the success that can be achieved when resources and people are pooled together," said Matthew D. Orwig, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Texas. "The disruption and dismantling of conspiracies like these will continue to be a top priority of law enforcement in East Texas." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin