Pubdate: Mon, 19 Jan 2004 Source: Green Bay Press-Gazette (WI) Copyright: 2004 Green Bay Press-Gazette Contact: http://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/879 Author: Nathan Phelps MEQUON MAN ON THE FRONT LINES IN WAR ON DRUGS Electrician's Mate 3rd Class Mike Barone Takes A Bail Of Cocaine, Which Will Be Used As Evidence In Court, To Storage After The Uss Samuel B. Roberts Intercepted A Drug Vessel. Navy/Coast Guard Mission Busts Pacific Smugglers Eight-point-nine tons. That's how much cocaine Navy and Coast Guard crew aboard the frigate USS Samuel B. Roberts seized during counter drug operations. "I've got 18 years experience in the Navy, and this is probably one of the most rewarding things I've had the opportunity to do," said John Holler, a 38-year-old Damage Control chief from Mequon. "This is my third operation .. and this is probably the most successful one we've had so far." Since deploying from their home port in the Mayport, Fla., the Navy ship and detachment of Coast Guard members have seized almost 9 tons of illegal drugs from smugglers in the eastern Pacific Ocean and Caribbean Sea. Holler and other members of the crew were interviewed by telephone earlier this month from the ship. The operations in the waters of Central and South America don't garner the headlines like military action in Persian Gulf, but crew members say they are involved in an ongoing war -- the war on drugs. The Samuel B. Roberts is commanded by 41-year-old Michael Hall, a San Diego native with just less than 19 years in the Navy. He's heard from crew members who have a sense of accomplishment in what they are doing. "Those drugs will never make it to their final destination -- that feeling is pretty much felt throughout the entire crew," Hall said. Joint Mission The Navy carries out the detection and tracking of suspect ships while the detachment of Coast Guardsmen on the ship carry out the law enforcement activities on the target vessel. U.S. law prohibits the Navy from carrying out law enforcement activities. The military and State Department also work though various agreements with other countries leading up to the boarding of a vessel. "The laws are very strict, and they are followed to the letter as in regard giving these people due process ... and we have to find probable cause," Hall said. "We don't just go blazing in like cowboys." The process of tracking, boarding and processing a smuggling vessel can take anywhere from 12 hours to several days. After communicating with the ship, the law enforcement detachment will develop probable cause and get approval to board though standing international agreements. The Coast Guard crew will then board the suspect vessel. "We move forward with a team working with the master and working with the crew and a team checking and accounting for all the space on the boat," said 36-year-old Lt. j.g. Stephen O'Neill, a Holden, Mass., native who is the officer in charge of the Coast Guard law enforcement detachment. "The easiest way to smuggle drugs is to build a false compartment ... We bring some expertise to the plate on how to locate and access compartments on vessels and what looks like a real compartment and what looks fake." O'Neill oversees between eight and 10 people on the detachment. When the detachment and Navy crew get word that drugs have been found, there's a sense of gratification. "Once we know we have the drugs or contraband, you hear the entire crew cheer ... we're taking drugs off the streets of America," Holler said. Last year was big for the operation with 12 ships seizing more than 103,000 pounds of narcotics with an estimated value of $932 million, according to U.S. Naval Forces Southern Command. Up to December, 25 vessels had been intercepted with 154 people detained. Navy aircraft are also part of the operations. Fiery Adversity But smugglers don't make it easy. Hidden compartments need to be ferreted out by members of the detachment and Navy engineers, poorly maintained ships need to be made safe for the boarding teams, and crew members are detained and brought back to the Samuel B. Roberts while evidence on the suspect vessel is tagged and photographed. During one of the busts, smugglers set their boat on fire in an attempt to destroy their cargo of drugs. Saving that ship -- and the evidence on board -- fell to men under the supervision of Holler. Photos of the incident show a brightly burning vessel just off the side of the Roberts and blue-clad Navy personnel with hoses dousing the flames. Seeing that vessel still floating after the fire brought an overwhelming sense of accomplishment to Holler and his crew who train day-in-and-day-out for such situations. "When I saw my guys go up there and performed the way they did ... it was just overwhelming," he said. "It was a big motivation factor -- they enjoyed it." War On Drugs The Samuel B. Roberts is just one part of a larger operation the United States is committed to carrying out. "It's not the forefront in regards to what's been going in Afghanistan and Iraq, but I think it's definitely just as important," Hall said. "There's a lot of people and a very large organization that goes into apprehending one vessel that's carrying drugs." In June 2000, Hall was the commander the USS Kingfisher, one of two Navy ships that searched for the sunken fishing tug Linda E on Lake Michigan. The USS Defender eventually found the missing boat. O'Neill said the Navy's mission might not get a lot of ink, but it deserves it. "You just don't hear about it a lot ... for everything we do down here, it has a domino effect back in the states," he said. "Even the smallest seizure we make out here really prevents a lot of ... cocaine or marijuana from reaching the street." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman