Pubdate: Sun, 04 Dec 2005 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2005 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: David Ovalle GANG TASK FORCE ARRESTS 45 ON DRUG, WEAPONS CHARGES The Miami-Dade Gang Task Force swept through North Miami-Dade, arresting 45 people and seizing cocaine, marijuana and assault rifles. The street was dark in North Miami Beach, and the skinny teenager in the red T-shirt stood on the sidewalk drinking a Corona. Not a violent crime. But for the gang detectives, it was intriguing enough. A closer look revealed a five-point crown tattooed on the underside of his left arm. On his left calf, the word King, on the right Love. On his left ankle, the tattoo read ADR -- or Amor del Rey, Spanish for Love from the King. Signs of the gang known as the Latin Kings. "It's something to do when you have no family. You get love," the teenager told detectives. "It's just a bunch of guys looking out for each other." The teen, who said he joined the gang while living in Connecticut but was no longer active, was arrested Friday night for underage drinking by Miami-Dade's Multi-Agency Gang Task Force. It's a group of local, state and federal officers who, using street-level intelligence, periodically sweep through the county. The task force, 52 strong this night, fanned out across North Miami-Dade, arresting 45 people; 17 on felony charges, 20 on misdemeanors and eight on outstanding warrants. They seized 32 grams of crack cocaine; 20 grams of powder cocaine and 114 grams of marijuana. Also three handguns, two assault rifles and shotgun. TASK FORCE'S GOAL The goal of the task force sweeps, police say, is to disrupt street crime on the spot and to gather intelligence and develop leads that will hopefully result in arrests that disrupt the gangs' overall operations. In the case of the Latin Kings teenager, detectives arrested him for a misdemeanor; but they hope he may be able to provide them insight into other gang activities. Tracking gangs in Miami-Dade County isn't as clear-cut as in hotbeds such as Southern California, where traditional gangs flaunt defined colors and affiliations. Violence with other gangs over colors or turf tends to be less frequent here, so spotting them requires more legwork. Here, particularly in North Miami-Dade, the gangs tend to coalesce more for illegal activities such as drug dealing. "It doesn't mean everybody who does street crime is in a gang," said Miami-Dade Lt. Pablo Lima, the supervisor of the gang unit. "But most gangs are into street crime." Gang detectives must still branch out into narcotics, guns and even illegal immigration. So the task force includes the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE); Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE); Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF); and the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA). RIFLE CONFISCATED On Friday night, the sun sinking into the horizon, the task force gathered at the Miami Gardens police station. The temperature hit the low 60s. Many criminals, it appeared, decided to stay indoors. But the night ended up pretty busy. At the Cloverleaf Apartments on the 600 block of 176th Street, Miami Beach Detective Mike Muley and Miami-Dade detectives Oscar Plasencia and Dwayne Hayes pulled up in their truck to a complex known locale for heavy drug dealing. In front of a first-floor building, they encountered a man in his 20s, trying to open the sliding glass door of his apartment. He was hiding something behind his back. Drugs, they thought. But as they drew closer, it became clear he was hiding an assault rifle. Muley drew his sidearm. Hayes lunged for the man. He was arrested without resisting. The officers found their first and most lethal score of the night: an AK-47 loaded with a banana-shaped clip, another one taped underneath that one for quicker access to an extra 30 rounds. "He said he got into an argument with his ex-girlfriend and was waiting for her friends to come get him," Muley said. "So he was going to shoot first." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman