Pubdate: Sat, 27 Dec 2003 Source: Athens Banner-Herald (GA) Copyright: 2003 Athens Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.onlineathens.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1535 Author: Teresa Stepzinski MANY DRUG TRAFFICKERS FELL TO RETIRED COP BRUNSWICK - Ray Starling built his career on secrecy. Many a night, he dozed on a surplus Army cot in a small, dingy office, waiting for word of someone looking to buy or sell some marijuana, heroin, crystal methamphetamine or cocaine. He has spent hours hunkered down in woods, cloaked in darkness and mosquitoes, patiently waiting for smugglers to come ashore with a clandestine cargo of pot. And for 30 years, Starling's easygoing demeanor and disarming grin were the downfall of more than a few drug traffickers. ''One of the things that I'm going to miss,'' he said, ''is the thrill and excitement of knowing that if you're a dope dealer and I've just bought from you ... you don't know it yet, but you're going to get busted.'' Starling, 54, retired this month from the Glynn County Police Department, where he worked his way up through the ranks to become captain and served as commander of the Glynn/Brunswick Narcotics Enforcement Team. He was recently honored with a retirement celebration by colleagues and area law enforcement officials. Starling began his 31-year career patrolling a beat in the county's toughest neighborhood. As a narcotics investigator and supervisor, he has worked some big drug cases. Those cases included the seizure of 21 tons of marijuana smuggled in on a shrimp boat and the arrest of drug traffickers flying planeloads of pot from Key West to Vermont. ''In my career, we've seized five shrimp boats, three sailboats, two airplanes and a lot of dope,'' Starling said. Police Chief Matt Doering has worked with Starling for about 20 years. ''He rises to that pinnacle where we're never really going to be able to replace him,'' Doering said. Starling cut his teeth on some of the county's biggest cases. In the mid-1970s, he and then-chief Carl Alexander became suspicious of two men hauling a sport-fishing boat registered in the Grand Bahamas up to St. Simons Island. Starling and Alexander followed the men around the clock for five days before the men met up with several other people who then led them to a secluded stretch of beach on the northern side of the island. ''It was just pure gut instinct that something wasn't right with those guys,'' Starling recalled. Their suspicions were confirmed when they learned one of the men was acquainted with a suspected drug smuggler. Starling and Alexander teamed up with agents from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Customs Service, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and Camden County Sheriff's Office to keep the group under surveillance. At about 3 a.m. one night, the investigators, concealed in nearby woods, saw that they had spent several hours waiting for: the men unloading bales of marijuana from a shrimp boat at a private dock. ''By then, we'd gotten smart. We waited for them to unload the boat before we arrested them. That way we didn't have to do all that heavy work, too,'' Starling said. They got 21 tons of marijuana and arrested 13 people. In another major case, the investigators intercepted a private plane carrying 7,000 pounds of marijuana when the pilot landed to refuel on St. Simons Island. An airport worker tipped them off to the shipment. Starling said the seizure and related investigation led to a drug kingpin with a smuggling operation along the eastern seaboard. After testifying against him during a trial in Burlington, Vt., Starling received what he considers one of his highest compliments. ''The defense attorney came up to me and said he didn't believe 'a bunch of country hicks' like us could put together as good a case as we did.'' Because smugglers often had better equipment, Starling said the investigators had to be twice as sneaky to catch them. He and Alexander once eased into the surf and swam up to catch drug dealers in the middle of a transaction on Jekyll Island. ''Me and Carl, we thought we could catch every bad guy back then,'' Starling said. ''At one time, we moved Army cots into the old drug squad office and slept there because we were afraid we'd miss a phone call with a tip about a drug deal.'' Because he was single, Starling said, it was easier for him to work undercover. He spent several Christmas holidays on the job - sending others home to be with their families. ''Working narcotics is hard on a marriage and family,'' he said. ''You might be gone two or three days and not be able to tell your wife where you are or what's happening.'' It was lonely work sometimes. ''But we stayed busy, and we all were like a family.'' Starling said he always emphasized a simple rule for officers under his command. ''We try to teach the new people that if a guy deals dope today, he'll deal dope tomorrow, too, so you build your case until you have enough evidence.'' Uncertain if he's really ready to retire, Starling is considering a second career in sort of the same type of work, as a hunting and fishing guide. - --- MAP posted-by: Perry Stripling