Pubdate: Mon, 27 Feb 2006 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2006 The Miami Herald Contact: http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262 Author: Jay Weaver NEW ROLE FOR OLD HAND IN DRUG WAR Mark Trouville, in Charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration's Miami Field Division, Has Been on the Front Lines of the U.S. War on Drugs for More Than Two Decades. As a rookie federal agent in 1979, Mark Trouville made a beeline to Miami to join the Drug Enforcement Administration in an impossible mission: fighting the sudden surge of South American cocaine washing through South Florida. "It really was the Wild West," said Trouville, recalling the region's cocaine-cowboy days. A decade later, as a senior DEA agent in Los Angeles, Trouville again found himself on the new front lines of the nation's drug war: the southwestern border with Mexico. Today, Trouville, 49, is back in South Florida, trading in his gold chains as an undercover agent for the button-down attire of a top administrator. For the past year, he's been in charge of the DEA's Miami office, managing about 500 agents in Florida and the Bahamas. Like Trouville himself, the drug trade has grown up, with Miami still a capital for the Colombian cartels. But the white powder that once flowed through South Florida is now smuggled through southwestern border states. Mexican traffickers, in turn, have become as powerful as the Colombian syndicates. An estimated 90 percent of all Colombian cocaine travels through Central America and Mexico -- via land or water routes -- to California, Arizona and Texas, according to a report last week by the Justice Department's National Drug Intelligence Center. The rest goes from Colombia through Jamaica, Haiti, the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico to South Florida. The radical shift has been under way since the late 1980s. The government's crackdown in the Caribbean corridor forced Colombian syndicates to turn to Mexican partners to move cocaine through the porous, 2,000-mile southwestern border, the eastern Pacific Ocean and the western Caribbean. Former front-line agents such as Trouville witnessed that sea change. In 1989, he led a group of DEA agents in Southern California who made the world's largest cocaine seizure: 21.5 tons, plus $12 million in cash. The DEA raided a warehouse in Sylmar, Calif., where the cocaine was piling up because of a conflict between Colombian distributors and a Mexico-based group hired to transport it across the border. The Mexicans refused to release the cocaine to the Colombians until they were paid for their transportation services. Colombian narco-traffickers responded to the staggering seizure by paying Mexico-based smugglers up to 50 percent of each cocaine shipment in product rather than in cash. "Since the Sylmar seizure, the drug organizations have been much more careful about storing that much cocaine in one spot," Trouville said. The drug trade's geographic shift has prompted the DEA to send more resources and manpower to the southwestern border, resulting in more arrests, more convictions and more seizures. Despite bigger cocaine hauls in the border states, the DEA's Miami field division -- along with the U.S. attorney's office -- continues to play an outsized role in the seemingly endless war on drugs. The reason: The Colombian cartels still have their "command and control" centers linked with longtime distribution networks in South Florida and New York. Trouville said the DEA has increasingly relied on confidential informants, wiretaps, foreign police forces and extraditions to interrupt the Colombian pipeline and networks in Mexico and the Caribbean. A case in point: the DEA's joint investigation with Immigration and Customs Enforcement of the reputed Cali Cartel founders, Gilberto and Miguel Rodriguez-Orejuela, reportedly responsible for 80 percent of the cocaine on U.S. streets in the last decade. The brothers, extradited in 2004-05, face a federal trial in Miami in September. Another major case: the DEA's probe of alleged drug trafficking in the administration of deposed Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who was ousted in 2004. Federal prosecutors in Miami have won convictions against about 20 smugglers, former national police officers and Aristide's former presidential security chief. They lost one case, against the head of Haiti's anti-drug brigade, at trial last year. Today, the last defendants, a former security chief for American Airlines in Port-au-Prince and her husband, will stand trial on charges of conspiring to import cocaine into the United States. Aristide, exiled in South Africa, has been under scrutiny by a federal grand jury, but no charges have been brought against him. Trouville declined to comment about the Aristide probe, but said Haiti remains a priority with other Caribbean nations as a hub for Colombian drug traffickers. As Trouville sets big-picture goals for the DEA's Miami division, he wants to continue attacking "the command and control" centers of U.S. and global drug organizations to cripple their narcotics supplies and money-laundering operations. "Our job is to look south," said Trouville, who came to Miami after running the DEA's New England field division in his native Boston. "We're the gateway for drugs coming into the United States." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake