Pubdate: Tue, 28 Sep 2004 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2004 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Elaine De Valle And Brooke Prescott Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) COAST GUARD SETS DRUG ARREST RECORD With improved intelligence and equipment, the Coast Guard has set a record for the amount of cocaine seized in one year. In the last year the U.S. Coast Guard seized more than 240,518 pounds of cocaine headed for the United States, shattering the agency's record for at-sea seizures in a single year. Although the largest amount of drugs was confiscated in the Pacific Ocean, the Caribbean region also saw a big jump and accounted for more than half of the boats seized this year, said Lt. Anthony Russell , a Coast Guard spokesman. Coast Guard officials attribute the record-breaking numbers to better intelligence and better equipment. The record, set last year, was 138,393 pounds of cocaine. "With better intelligence and an increase in interagency and international cooperation, we've been able to do more targeted operations, which take less time and money than more frequent random boardings," Russell said. Just off the coast of South Florida, more than 2,000 pounds of cocaine have been seized in the last six months. In July, two Bahamian men were seven miles from Fort Lauderdale in a 26-foot pleasure boat when they were stopped as part of a routine inspection. The Coast Guard found 300 pounds of cocaine -- worth $13.8 million on the street. Two months earlier, the Coast Guard found 2,000 pounds of cocaine on two twin outboards 10 miles off the coast of South Florida. Street value: $92 million. And just last week, in the Pacific Ocean, the Coast Guard made its largest cocaine seizure ever: 29,000 pounds from the Lina Maria, a shrimp-style fishing boat boarded just southwest of the Galapagos Islands. A second, similar ship carried 27,000 pounds. The jump in seizures could also be attributed to better equipment, said Cmdr. Glenn Grahl of Tactical Law Enforcement Team South. "We now have armed helicopters," Grahl said. "We have better long-range aircraft. We have better small over-the-horizon boats, that are faster and have better radar and better communications." When it comes to drug smugglers, however, DEA officials say little has changed. The drugs most often smuggled continue to be cocaine and marijuana in either freighters or go-fast boats, said Joe Kilmer, a DEA spokesman. They're still leaving from the northern coast of Colombia, and they're still going to the Caribbean -- usually Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Bahamas and Jamaica. Once they reach the Caribbean, Kilmer said, the cocaine is usually turned over to another person or boat before heading toward the United States. "The whole game, so to speak is just that, it's a game," he said. "They do something, we react. There's nothing that we see that we haven't seen before.' - --- MAP posted-by: Derek