Pubdate: Tue, 25 Feb 2003 Source: Oklahoma Daily, The (OK Edu) Copyright: 2003 Oklahoma Daily Contact: http://www.oudaily.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1371 Note: This paper is published by the University of Oklahoma Author: Shannon McCaffrey - Knight-Ridder Tribune FIFTY-FIVE INDICTED IN BIGGEST-EVER DRUG-PARAPHERNALIA CRACKDOWN Many distributors marketed "sneaky" items to young people via the internet. WASHINGTON -- Federal authorities on Monday charged 55 people with trafficking drug paraphernalia in what is believed to be the largest-ever crackdown on dealers of marijuana bongs, cocaine pipes and other tools. In coordinated raids across the country, authorities said they confiscated thousands of tons of drug paraphernalia worth tens of millions of dollars. They took down distributors that supplied more than half the nation's supply of drug equipment, a federal prosecutor said. Many of the distributors in the $1 billion-a-year industry openly peddled their products on the Internet, in catalogs and at retail stores, commonly known as head shops. Some of the gear -- like "sneaky" marijuana pipes tucked into Hi-liter markers and bongs adorned with smiley faces -- were marketed to youngsters online where they could easily make anonymous purchases, authorities said. "With the advent of the Internet, the illegal drug paraphernalia industry has exploded," Attorney General John Ashcroft said, adding that the industry "has invaded the homes of families across the country without their knowledge." If convicted, those charged with conspiring to sell or selling the illicit apparatus face a maximum of three years in prison and fines of $250,000. The coordinated busts on Monday were led by the Drug Enforcement Administration in conjunction with other federal agencies. Some of the distributors ran sophisticated high-volume operations, operating out of huge warehouses with on-site glassblowing facilities that allowed them to create their own bongs and pipes, according to U.S. Attorney Mary Beth Buchanan of the western district of Pennsylvania. One of the companies busted Monday pulled in annual sales of $50 million a year, she said. The probe began in Pittsburgh after authorities discovered that local shops being used by a drug dealer to buy products to cut and repackage cocaine and heroin were being supplied by large national companies making free use of the Internet. Buchanan said the investigation put the nation's largest suppliers out of business. A federal grand jury in Pittsburgh, Pa., handed up 17 indictments against 27 defendants as part of "Operation Pipe Dreams." Ten of those indictments were against national distributors. "Operation Headhunter," run out of Des Moines, Iowa, brought down national distributors in Michigan, California and Texas with four indictments charging nine people. The remaining 19 defendants were charged in other states. Federal authorities were in the process Monday of obtaining court orders to shut down 11 Internet sites with names like puffpipes.com. Visitors to those sites will be redirected to a DEA Website. Ashcroft refused to say if those who attempt to access the sites would be traced or investigated. He said the overall investigation is ongoing and that more arrests and Website restraints are possible. Acting DEA Administrator John Brown said there was no real difference between those selling drugs and those selling the products that make it possible to use them. "They are as much a part of drug trafficking as silencers are a part of criminal homicide," Brown said. Federal law makes it a crime to sell products intended mainly for the use of illegal drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh