Pubdate: Thu, 22 Jan 2004 Source: Beaufort Gazette, The (SC) Copyright: 2004 The Beaufort Gazette Contact: http://www.beaufortgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1806 Author: Glenn Maffei RIDGELAND COP SEIZES $200K IN SUSPECTED DRUG MONEY RIDGELAND -- An "extremely nervous" driver and a suspicious video cassette recorder led a Ridgeland police officer to $205,790 in suspected drug money during an Interstate 95 traffic stop Tuesday evening. The female driver in her mid-30s told police she did not know the money was hidden in a compartment in the floor boards of the 1995 Ford van after she was pulled over for failing to stay in her lane, said Ridgeland Police Chief Richard Woods. The woman, whom police did not charge and would not identify, was southbound from Buffalo, N.Y., to Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and police believe she was headed to pick up a shipment of cocaine to bring back North. The interdiction-trained officer, a member of the department's Interstate Criminal Enforcement team, became suspicious during the 5:30 p.m. traffic stop when he noticed a VCR attached beneath the seat even though there wasn't a television in the van, Woods said. The department's drug dog alerted to the vehicle, Woods said, and closer inspection showed the concealed compartment beneath the van. The compartment was controlled by two electronic pistons that lifted the passenger seat and opened part of the floor, he said. "We're definitely having an impact on the drug trade," Woods said of the department's drug interdiction success. "It may just be a minor disruption for them, but nonetheless it's a lot of money and that's going to create a setback. "The law-abiding public would be shocked at what's going up and down our highways." South Carolina highways are patrolled by seven drug-interdiction teams: Dillon County and the city of Dillon have a joint task force and Dorchester and Charleston counties have a joint task force; Florence and Colleton counties, and the city of Santee and Ridgeland have interdiction teams. Highway Patrol also has an interdiction unit. The departments keep 80 percent of seized money to spend on drug-fighting tools and the Drug Enforcement Administration gets a 20 percent cut. Since August 2002, when the Ridgeland Police Department began drug interdiction, they have seized more than a half-million dollars in suspected drug money and drugs with a street value of more than $5 million. The department's largest marijuana seizure was in September when 50 pounds of the drug with an estimated street value of $250,000 was discovered during an interstate traffic stop. The department's largest cocaine seizure was in July when 30 kilograms valued at $4.2 million was found during an interstate traffic stop. Its previous record cash seizure was in November 2002, when a traffic stop yielded $120,779. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin