Pubdate: Tue, 07 Oct 2003 Source: Tampa Tribune (FL) Copyright: 2003, The Tribune Co. Contact: http://www.tampatrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/446 Section: Metro, Page 1 Author: Mike Saewitz, Sarasota Herald-Tribune Photo: Photo by: Sarasota Police Department Sarasota Police used 10 kilograms of cocaine as bait for a drug dealer. http://www.mapinc.org/images/1007drugs1.jpg Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) SARASOTA CASHES IN ON FORFEITURES BY LURING DRUG DEALERS TO AREA Critics Label Operations As 'Money-Making Scheme' SARASOTA - Dealers from as far away as England, Venezuela and Panama are being lured to Sarasota to buy illegal drugs from undercover detectives posing as dealers. Police arrest the dealers and seize the cash and vehicles left behind. Since 2001, more than $1.3 million has flowed into the department under federal and state forfeiture laws that allow police to keep money and valuables seized from suspected dealers. Sarasota police say the drug deals take dangerous people off the street, and the cash supplements the police budget and helps some charitable causes. Much of the money was used to perpetuate the undercover operations and pay for law enforcement conferences and supplies. According to a Sarasota Herald- Tribune review: About $240,000 went to pay for conferences for officers, including training trips to Orlando, Panama City Beach and Las Vegas. Since 2001, a confidential informant has been paid about $115,000 to help with the operations. The department has given $100,000 to several other informants. Sarasota may seem an unlikely place to stage an international drug deal, but Sarasota detectives and federal Drug Enforcement Administration agents have lured at least 40 people here since 2001 and arrested them on federal trafficking charges, according to court records. Many of the dealers are serving long prison terms. "The main point is to get bad guys off the streets," said the detective behind the arrests, who for safety reasons did not want to be identified. "My job is to lock bad guys up." Open to debate is whether the arrests benefit the city. Virginia lawyer David B. Smith, an expert on forfeiture law, questions the motives behind the operations. "Most communities are not interested in spending their resources dealing with out-of-town bad guys," said Smith, a former U.S. Department of Justice forfeiture official. "It's obviously a money- making scheme." The lead detective disputes that assertion. "I don't focus on the money," he said. But he acknowledges that the operations have little to do with fighting drugs in Sarasota. "We are doing more good for the global aspect of reducing crime than we are in Sarasota," he said. How It's Done In the "reverse stings," paid informants contact high-level international buyers interested in large quantities of cocaine. The lead detective and informants travel across the country and overseas, with federal authorities paying for expenses, officials said. The final transactions and arrests happen at secret locations here, mostly in the middle of the night. The dealers are "very dangerous, dangerous people," most of whom entered the country illegally and don't live in Sarasota, the lead detective said. By law, the money cannot be spent on normal operating costs such as salaries. In addition to spending about $450,000 on conferences and informants, the department has spent $160,000 to lease expensive cars, $45,000 on cell phone bills and $35,000 on lawyers who handle forfeiture proceedings. When the city commission asked Police Chief Peter Abbott earlier this year to cut his department's budget, he elected to maintain the drug program and suggested that two community policing programs be eliminated. In the face of a public outcry, he decided to continue the community programs. Police must donate 15 percent of money collected under state forfeiture laws to drug and crime prevention programs in their communities: Sarasota police collected $500,000. Since 2001, the department has donated $80,000 to a number of charities, including Sarasota Court Watch, a missing child charity in Fort Lauderdale, and Drug Abuse Resistance Education, or D.A.R.E, which teaches elementary school students about the negative impact of drugs. The total donations figure, which just meets the state-set minimum, includes $60,000 donated in the past two weeks after questions were raised by a reporter. Police spokesman Jay Frank says the timing of the donations, which were made near the end of the department's fiscal year, was coincidental. There is no requirement to make charitable donations from the $800,000 collected under the federal law. DEA Connection Sarasota's proximity to Interstate 75 and its reputation as a quiet community are enough to attract dealers, said Dominic P. Albanese, assistant special agent in charge of the DEA's Tampa office. "Would I rather do something in Miami or go a couple of hours to sleepy Collier County or Sarasota? To me, it's a no-brainer: I want to get out of the limelight," Albanese said. The operations are run by the lead detective and a DEA special agent. Five detectives with the department's strategic narcotics unit help out. The relationship between the lead detective and the DEA began in 1987, he said. Police say the strategic unit's relationship with the DEA has helped the local fight against crime. After a two-year operation, city police and federal authorities arrested about 20 Sarasota residents in July on charges they supplied hundreds of thousands of dollars in cocaine to the Newtown community since 1997. They executed search warrants and seized $128,000 during that investigation, called "Operation One- Drop." Many of the seizures were made under a state civil forfeiture law designed to take the profit out of the drug trade. The Florida Contraband Forfeiture Act allows authorities to seize any property used in committing any felony. Sarasota police have seized cars, money, jewelry and even a horse. Sarasota's "reverse sting" operations are unusual for such a small department, said Smith, the forfeiture expert. No other local agency in Sarasota, Manatee or Charlotte stages the deals on such a grand scale. The operations worry some residents, who say there are enough criminals in Sarasota already. "That means you're luring people you know are dangerous," said Newtown activist Michelle Martin. The detective said the operations are quiet, happen overnight and away from local residents and are easier to control on the department's "home turf." The risky work has made the detective and the strategic unit a source of pride within the city and department. City Commissioner Fredd Atkins said he fully approves of the international deals, though he questions how the money is spent. "I don't find any fault in us luring drug dealers at the upper level of the echelon," Atkins said. "I'd rather see them in jail than the pushers and users." But he says he wishes some of the money would go toward the drug problem in Newtown, a community where "drugs are greatly impacting in a negative way," he said. "They've basically ignored the opportunity to help the people," Atkins said. "Instead, they continue to buy their toys and take their trips." How Seized Money Is Used Police officials say the money seized is put to good use. The department used $200,000 to match a federal grant for new laptops and software, including a program that speaks to patrol officers while they're driving, a program that prints computerized traffic tickets and one that allows officers to store mug shots on their laptops. The money is also used for equipment and supplies, as well as class tuition reimbursement for some officers. And it pays for conferences, which Abbott said are essential training opportunities that attract new officers and help others improve. The department, with 200 officers, spent about $100,000 on training and conferences in 2001, and $140,000 more since then. Since 2000, the money has financed dozens of trips to Orlando, including stays at the Hilton Walt Disney World and the Swan during conferences sponsored by groups such as the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. The department sent six officers to the Florida Narcotics Association conference in Panama City Beach. Three drug detectives attended a seminar in Las Vegas, where they stayed at the MGM Grand Hotel. That trip cost $4,000. Abbott said the conferences are well worth the cost. "I don't think people are riding Dumbo the Elephant when they're supposed to be at antiterrorist training," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake