Pubdate: Wed, 30 Apr 2003
Source: Federal Way Mirror (WA)
Contact:  http://www.fedwaymirror.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2077
Author: Erica Jahn

DRUG RUNNERS HAVE TROOPERS ON THEIR TAILS

On a sunny Friday morning, two Washington State Patrol cruisers sat side by 
side near an overpass on Interstate 90.

The trooper in one car aimed a radar gun at drivers cresting a hill almost 
2,000 meters away. The trooper in the other car tore out of the median 
after speeders or vehicles missing front plates.

But while they work traffic, these troopers aren't really traffic cops, per 
se. They don't get called out to respond to incidents unless they're very 
serious, and they don't work a beat.

They work on the State Patrol's Serious Crime Highway Apprehension Team. 
They're looking for people with outstanding warrants, dangerous weapons or 
stolen cars. But mostly they're looking for people running drugs between 
Canada and Washington.

Trooper Dick Cooper, a 24-year State Patrol veteran, works with a 
drug-sniffing dog named Yogi, whom the patrol acquired from the pound.

Trooper Rick Thomas, Cooper's partner, has been with the patrol 18 years.

Since May 2002, when the team really got rolling, they've made 250 drug 
arrests. Forty-five of those were felonies, State Patrol spokeswoman Monica 
Hunter said, and they seized four cars, five guns and $20,000 in cash.

They might pull someone over for speeding -- all their stops are legitimate 
traffic infractions, Cooper said, and they never stop certain types of cars 
or drivers -- but while they're talking with the driver, they're also 
looking around the interior of the car, smelling for suspicious odors and 
checking out the demeanor of the driver.

Just before 10 a.m. on April 4, Cooper pulled over a silver BMW with 
British Columbia plates for driving 75 miles per hour along the 60 mph 
stretch of highway. Cooper said B.C. plates are particularly interesting 
because "B.C. Bud" is a prevalent marijuana crop run from Canada to the 
United States.

"That's the hot commodity out here for marijuana users," he said.

While Cooper can't tell who might have something illegal hidden in the car, 
he and his partner enforce all the traffic laws in an effort to come into 
contact with people who might be running drugs.

After the silver BMW, Cooper pulled over a black BMW with a firefighters 
association sticker on the back window because the car didn't have a front 
plate. The young driver caught Cooper's attention because he was so 
uncomfortable, but Cooper let him go with a warning. "Some people are just 
really nervous. Most of the time, we're not the bearers of good news," he 
said. "My gut feeling is just that he's a nervous kid, and I can appreciate 
that."

If his instincts lead him to believe someone might have drugs in the car, 
he'll ask the person to step out to talk more closely. If he still thinks 
the person might have something illegal in the car, he'll have Yogi conduct 
a sniff search.

He said he's always polite and courteous, and most people are cooperative. 
If he's wrong, he apologizes and sends the driver on his or her way.

"I rarely have a problem with anyone I stop out here," he said. "We rarely, 
rarely have any confrontations, because we treat people with respect. You 
might be going to jail, but we'll treat you with respect.

"It's a game. If you play the game and you get caught, well, it's like the 
two dudes from Chicago."

Those two men were the subjects of one of Cooper's favorite arrests. He 
stopped the men, who were driving from Washington to Michigan and camping 
along the way, for speeding. When he got to the window, he had a strong 
suspicion there was marijuana somewhere in the car.

"We knew it was there because we could smell it," he said. "It smelled like 
fresh marijuana. They swore there wasn't a leaf in the car and asked us to 
search it. These two dudes were sitting on the guardrail smiling."

Yogi sniffed around the car and alerted on the trunk. Cooper and Thomas 
unpacked a trunk load of camping gear and found about 200 grams of pot in 
two big bags in the speakers.

One of the men told Cooper he'd never seen a narcotics dog as good as Yogi 
and showed the officers where on the vehicle they normally hid their pot.

"They were two of the nicest guys. They wanted to pet the dog. They said, 
'This would be so much easier if we'd smoked some of it first,'" Cooper 
said, laughing.

But Cooper isn't so amused by rolling methamphetamine labs -- drivers who 
carry the chemicals to cook meth in their cars. "I'll tell you, that right 
there will kill my dog," he said.

The statewide apprehension team was created last April. The program doesn't 
receive grants, but it's not terribly expensive because Cooper and Thomas 
are regular troopers who work traffic.

They spend most of their time patrolling Interstates 90 and 5, which serve 
as major corridors for goods and products, including illegal drugs.

The troopers don't stop semis or tractor trailers, which sometimes are used 
for drug running, because the State Patrol has a commercial vehicle team 
versed in all the separate laws regulating semis and tractor trailers.

Busting drug runners is difficult because there's so much traffic in the 
area, Cooper said. For the most part, more drugs are run during the day 
than at night, when it's easier to blend in with the river of cars.

"If you've got 100 pounds of coke in the trunk, you just flow with the 
traffic," he said. "At night, you might let it slip up to 70 and you'll 
stick out a little more."

On most days, he and Thomas pick a spot and look for speeders in the 
onslaught of traffic.

"Hitting the mother lode is like finding a needle in a haystack," Cooper 
said, scanning the blur of cars speeding past the median. "This guy could 
have two pounds of heroin in his trunk. Living in King County, there's so 
much traffic. We stop a lot of cars."
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