Pubdate: Thu, 18 Jan 2007 Source: Merced Sun-Star (CA) Copyright: 2007 Merced Sun-Star Contact: http://www.mercedsun-star.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2546 Author: Michael Doyle, Sun-Star Washington Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm (Walters, John) SUCCESSFUL DRUG RAID PUTS AREA TASK FORCE IN NATIONAL SPOTLIGHT WASHINGTON -- A high-profile Modesto marijuana bust has now earned local agents national acclaim. It's also showing how a Central Valley anti-drug task force has expanded its turf. In a ceremony today, the White House drug czar is honoring the state, local and federal officers who took down Modesto's California Healthcare Collective. Officials charge the ostensibly nonprofit collective with fronting for big-time marijuana dealers. "Most health care providers wear white coats and carry stethoscopes," declared Bill Ruzzamenti, director of the Fresno-based Central Valley High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area. "In this particular case, they wore bullet-proof vests (and) carried a gun." Ruzzamenti nominated the Modesto police officers and others who are receiving the so-called National Marijuana Initiative awards. He also is accompanying them to the event, held in the ornate Old Executive Office Building next to the White House. The awards themselves are modest: a certificate and a handshake from Office of National Drug Control Policy Director John Walters. Still, they are piling up for Californians. Walters is handing out three other awards today, as well, to California officers and investigators. The honors are going to analysts at a Sacramento-based "intelligence fusion center," to a Central Valley "marijuana investigations team" and to the statewide California Campaign Against Marijuana Planting. With four national awards -- out of a total of 15 being presented today -- the California anti-pot efforts exceed any other region. Modesto police officers, Fresno sheriff's deputies, the director of California's Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement and others all flocked back for the show. "We have so much activity here, and we have some really good folks," Ruzzamenti said. But meth, not marijuana, was Ruzzamenti's original focus. The longtime narcotics agent began the Central Valley HIDTA in 1999. Congress provides relatively modest federal funding: a base amount of $2.5 million, plus another $2.5 million or so added on. The federal funds pay for Ruzzamenti, intelligence analysts and some support personnel serving the area from Sacramento to Bakersfield. The real muscle, though, comes from upward of 120 state, local and federal agents, officers and deputies who coordinate their work with federal assistance. "This shows the level of commitment by the sheriffs and the police chiefs," Ruzzamenti said of the latest award-winning work. "They don't send us chumps." The Central Valley HIDTA's mission statement avers that its goal is "to reduce the manufacture, trafficking and distribution of methamphetamine, precursor chemicals and other dangerous drugs." Over time, the Valley's big meth labs have decamped for Mexico -- so agents have sought new targets. Jill Smith- Edwards, for instance, is an intelligence analyst from the Stanislaus County Sheriffs Department. She is assigned to the Sacramento-based intelligence fusion center, joining with California National Guard Master Sgt. Kevin McLeer to coordinate anti-pot efforts on public lands. "Jill and Kevin have developed the art of bringing investigators and analysts together," their award nomination states. In Modesto, investigators claim the California Health Collective earned some $8 million a year by selling marijuana, supposedly for medicinal purposes. Agents with HIDTA's Stanislaus San Joaquin Meth Task Force pitched in to investigate, as did many others. Nine defendants affiliated with the California Healthcare Collective now face federal charges, ranging from drug possession to money laundering. All have pleaded not guilty and are free on bail. "We followed California law to the letter," Luke Scarmazzo, former manager of the marijuana center, told The Modesto Bee in a recent letter. "We paid our taxes. We went to work every day providing a benefit and service to the community. Yet in the end we were made out to look like common criminals." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek