Pubdate: Sat, 22 Mar 2003
Source: Washington Times (DC)
Copyright: 2003 News World Communications, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.washingtontimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/492
Author: Jerry Seper

PRESIDENT TO NOMINATE 1ST WOMAN AS DRUG CZAR

President Bush yesterday announced his intention to nominate Karen P. 
Tandy, head of the Justice Department's Organized Crime Drug Enforcement 
Task Force, as the new chief of the Drug Enforcement Administration.

If confirmed by the Senate, she would be the first woman ever to head the 
anti-drug agency.

A veteran prosecutor, she would replace acting administrator John B. Brown 
III, a longtime drug agent who was named in January to succeed former Rep. 
Asa Hutchinson. The Arkansas Republican had left the agency to become 
undersecretary for border and transportation security at the new Department 
of Homeland Security.

In his announcement, Mr. Bush noted that Mrs. Tandy, a deputy associate 
attorney general, had previously served as both chief of litigation in the 
Justice Department's asset-forfeiture office and as deputy chief for 
narcotics and dangerous drugs.

The president said she also was an assistant U.S. attorney in Virginia and 
Washington state, where she handled the prosecution of violent crime, 
complex drug cases, money laundering and forfeiture cases.

Mrs. Tandy earned her bachelor's degree and her law degree from Texas Tech 
University.

As head of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force, she oversees a 
federal drug-enforcement program that focuses attention and resources on 
the disruption and dismantling of major drug-trafficking organizations.

The task force provides a framework for law enforcement agencies to work 
together to target well-established and complex organizations that direct, 
finance or engage in illegal drug trafficking and related crimes, including 
money laundering and tax violations, public corruption, illegal 
immigration, weapons violations and violent crimes.

The program, in existence since 1982, uses the resources and expertise of 
its 11 member federal agencies, along with support from state and local law 
enforcement. It has seen the successful prosecution and conviction of 
44,000 members of criminal organizations and has seized cash and property 
assets totaling $3 billion.

And Mrs. Tandy is no stranger to the DEA. Last year, the Detroit field 
division presented her with a crystal plaque recognizing her "significant 
contributions and support." She was actively involved in a DEA 
investigation that targeted pseudoephedrine-trafficking organizations in 
Michigan and Ohio, which smuggled hundreds of tons of the drug into the 
United States from Canada.

Her assistance led to the conception of Operation VORTEX, a new initiative 
designed to disrupt pseudoephedrine trafficking from Detroit to the western 
United States.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens