Pubdate: Sun, 15 Feb 2004 Source: Tennessean, The (TN) 69699 Copyright: 2004 The Tennessean Contact: http://www.tennessean.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/447 Author: Andy Humbles DEALERS GET CREATIVE WHEN HIDING THEIR DRUGS When people swap recipes for ''pepper pot,'' this isn't what they're talking about. A marijuana delivery being driven to Lebanon was discovered by police hidden in chili and jalapeno pepper cans in January. That's nothing out of the ordinary, say drug enforcement agents and law officers all over Middle Tennessee. The unusual becomes the norm when it comes to drug dealers trying to hide their stashes, they say. ''Every way you can imagine and beyond the imaginable,'' Wilson County Sheriff Terry Ashe said. ''I've seen it hollowed out in car mufflers and stuffed in spare tires of cars with the air blown back in. Inside toys, footballs and basketballs.'' Gas tanks, car batteries, diapers, laundry detergent boxes, mailed packages, compartments under the floor of a house, car dashboards, radios and TVs are more places police say drugs are hidden. ''Once we seized a truck we knew had cocaine in it, but we had to search two days before we could find it,'' said Metro Police detective Jesse Burchwell. ''It had been in the engine block.'' Last summer, Metro seized just more than $1.4 million worth of cocaine after it was shipped through the mail and discovered in potato cans. Rodney Jerome Smith, of 3219 Crowe Drive in Nashville, was arrested in the case and was indicted in July on federal charges of possession with intent to distribute six kilograms of cocaine, according to federal court records. Police were tipped off about the drug shipment, and when Smith picked up the package, police got a search warrant, the detective recalled. ''When we opened the package, we didn't see any drugs. Just four potato cans,'' Burchwell said. ''They had been re-sealed just like the factory would. We executed a search warrant on the house, and we found more empty metal cans like the ones in the package along with kilo wrappers. . So he had (hidden drugs in food cans) successfully before.'' Detective John Edwards of the Wilson County Sheriff's Department remembers a recent bust where marijuana was mixed in with dog food in a 50-pound bag. He also remembers another arrest, of a man who had stored marijuana mixed with dog food in a Rubbermaid container. The ruses get much more elaborate for high-level drug pushers. ''There is a whole industry dedicated to hiding drugs,'' said Greg Bunch, a sergeant with Sumner County's Drug Task Force. Bunch said his agency made a cocaine arrest last year of a Goodlettsville man who had a special wall in a laundry room that would open up when slightly pushed, similar to a radio button popping out. Behind the wall was an area where guns and cocaine regularly were stored and hidden. Bunch didn't elaborate further on the case because he said it is connected to an ongoing federal investigation. ''It was impressive,'' Bunch said. ''This arrest, we got the cocaine at the door, but we had information he might have a hidden compartment, and when we opened it, we found guns. It was where he had stored cocaine before. You see floor compartments, window seals. Some of it is done very well,'' Bunch said. Furniture and clothes also can be made with hidden compartments that drug dealers use, Bunch said. Major furniture makers often can custom-install hidden compartments for people requesting them, ''often for legitimate purposes,'' he said. Bunch said periodicals popular in the drug culture have classified advertisements selling furniture, clothes and other items with hidden compartments. ''It's amazing to see where folks conceal drugs and how neat they are and how they can seal it back up,'' Lebanon Police Detective Tommy Maggart said. Dealers trying to conceal drugs from sight also try to mask the smell from police and dogs trained to sniff out narcotics. Police say detergents, soap powder, laundry dryer sheets and coffee grounds are common ways to mask the smell. ''Because marijuana has a strong, distinctive odor and dealers have to move it in large quantities to make money, masking agents are very common,'' Ashe said. ''Hopefully, you have a good drug dog, and some are very good. It might be impossible to stop a car and know to take a muffler apart. ''But there aren't enough dogs and not enough manpower,'' Ashe said. Burchwell calls Nashville a hub for drugs, one reason being the interconnection of so many interstates here. He said in 2002, the Metro Vice Division doubled its seizures in drugs, drug money and arrests related to narcotics over its previous records in those categories and in 2003 exceeded that. ''It tells me drug availability and the amounts of drugs have increased,'' Burchwell said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh