Pubdate: Sat, 15 Jan 2005 Source: Arizona Daily Star (AZ) Copyright: 2005 Pulitzer Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.azstarnet.com/star/today/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/23 Author: Scott Simonson, Arizona Daily Star Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) OFFICIALS TAKE AIM AT DRUGS DELIVERED VIA MAIL, SHIPPERS The sour odor of vinegar served as a warning about the two boxes dropped off for Federal Express pickup at a Midtown store. Law enforcement officials had watched a man and a woman take the boxes inside Sonoran Desert Ship and Move Center, 2020 E. Broadway. The surveillance was part of a growing crackdown on drugs being sent through the mail, Federal Express, United Parcel Service and other package delivery services from Tucson, a national hub of marijuana trafficking. Estimates say up to 90 percent of the nation's marijuana trade passes through Arizona. In this case, after the pair left their boxes for shipping, members of the Counter Narcotics Alliance, a local multi-agency anti-drug task force, moved in. They inspected the boxes and smelled something odd, according to a search warrant obtained Dec. 2 in Pima County Superior Court. Drug smugglers sometimes use vinegar to mask the smell of marijuana they're sending, said Inspector Jim Harper, supervisor of the Tucson branch of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service. They also use fabric softener sheets, coffee and motor oil to try to confuse drug-sniffing dogs. This time, Shadow, a drug-sniffing canine, wasn't fooled. The discovery led to the confiscation of 24 pounds of marijuana. Members of the Counter Narcotics Alliance seized the boxes and investigated the people who sent them. Starting in September, the Counter Narcotics Alliance increased its emphasis on catching people who are shipping drugs, said Tucson Police Department Capt. David Neri, commander of the alliance. In the last four months of 2004, the task force's "box squad" seized at least 300 parcels, more than 3 tons of marijuana, 6 pounds of cocaine and a small amount of crack cocaine. Those seized packages led to 41 arrests, according to Counter Narcotics Alliance statistics. "The stuff that comes through Tucson is literally going to every corner of the country," Neri said. The task force last year intercepted drug packages headed for at least 47 states, he said. The U.S. Postal Inspection Service increased its staff of Tucson inspectors from three to seven in 2004, Harper said. He anticipates more are on the way. The increased efforts to stop drug dealing through mail and parcel delivery reflects the prominence of Arizona in the narcotics trade, said Harper, whose agency works with the Counter Narcotics Alliance locally, as well as federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Border Patrol. And drug smugglers, Harper added, have learned what many legitimate businesses already knew: Express package services are a good deal for quick shipping, convenient delivery, and help with those urgent occasions when it absolutely, positively has to be there overnight. Neri said the recent crackdown has been helped by local merchants who own parcel shipping businesses as well as the parcel delivery services themselves. "They're pretty much into every carrier," Neri said. "The Postal Service is no exception." Several owners of Tucson-area mailing and shipping stores declined to comment for this story. They said they feared the use of their names could jeopardize their safety, because they were helping authorities identify drug shipments. The local chapter of the Associated Mail & Parcel Centers, a national trade organization of parcel shipping stores with about 90 members in Tucson and Phoenix, also declined to comment. Brandon Gale, national president of the organization, said there's a great deal of concern about the problem among store owners in the Tucson area, and many of them are working with law enforcement. However, Gale said, none of the local chapter members he contacted felt safe talking about the problem for a newspaper article. A sample of recent search warrants revealed some of the tactics that smugglers use: A Aoe Disguising drugs as other items: Crock pot and computer boxes were found to contain marijuana in a Dec. 1 search of a Federal Express shipping hub in Tucson, according to a search warrant. Harper said smugglers sometimes take apart an appliance like a stereo, pack it with marijuana, then re-assemble it. The search of the FedEx hub uncovered about 54 pounds of marijuana in packages destined for Alabama, Georgia and New York. A Aoe Suspicious business dealings: A regular customer at The Postal Connection, 2968 W. Ina Road, had been shipping packages to New York, using overnight delivery, paying cash, and shipping just before the delivery truck made its daily pickup, according to a search warrant obtained last month. Counter Narcotics Alliance surveillance of the customer led to the seizure of a box of marijuana about the size of a microwave oven before it could be shipped. A Aoe After the drugs go out, cash comes back: Harper said inspectors also seize cash and money orders mailed to Tucson as payment for drugs. He declined to give an exact figure, but said the cash seized locally totaled in the millions and added, "It's enough to fund the entire Tucson Police Department budget." The Tucson police have an operating budget of about $127 million for the 2005 fiscal year. Finding the drugs and drug money can be daunting: The U.S. Postal Service processes about 2 million parcels or letters in Tucson in an average day, Harper said. Other delivery services like UPS or FedEx swell the total further. Drug-sniffing dogs improve the odds for investigators. Neri said drug packages can lead investigators to those who were shipping the contraband, and can alert authorities in other states to who may be receiving drugs. "Are we making a dent?" Harper said. "I think we are, in terms of we're making more arrests, serving more warrants." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek