Pubdate: Sun, 11 Nov 2007
Source: Salt Lake Tribune (UT)
Copyright: 2007 The Salt Lake Tribune
Contact:  http://www.sltrib.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/383
Author: Nathan C. Gonzalez

N. CALIFORNIA MARIJUANA HARVEST HAS UTAH'S ROADWAYS BUZZING

It's marijuana harvest time in northern California, and Utah's 
interstates are flowing with millions of dollars in drugs and cash.

Drug traffickers will go to great lengths to hide drugs and cash to 
ensure police don't find their stashes, said Utah Highway Patrol Lt. 
Steve Winward. In a span of three days, UHP officers arrested 19 
people and confiscated more than $2 million in drugs in Summit County.

Eight UHP officers, trained specifically to sniff out motorists 
trafficking drugs, pulled over hundreds of vehicles for traffic 
violations on Interstate 80 between Tuesday and Friday night, Winward said.

Sixteen of those stops netted 213 pounds of marijuana, 55 pounds of 
cocaine and about $11,000 in cash, according to UHP.

"Thursday night, they had four stops within four hours," Winward said.

The drugs were found in garbage bags, hidden in spare tires and in 
compartments added onto vehicles.

"One tried to mask the smell of the marijuana by putting it in 
containers of grease," Winward said. "Drug transporters are getting 
more and more savvy and are trying to conceal drugs in compartments."

UHP officials singled out the Summit County stretch of I-80 because 
it's popular for transporters.

At 2,902 miles long, and spanning 11 states - ending just 4 miles shy 
of New York City - I-80 and has become a major artery for traffickers 
moving drugs grown or manufactured in northern California.

UHP's recent drug stops and arrests were somewhat unusual, Winward 
said. Officers trained to recognize drug traffickers are usually 
sprinkled throughout the state, and "this is one of the very first 
times when they had a concentrated effort," he said.

Training helps the officers gauge the mannerisms of suspected drug 
transporters. Police also look for inconsistencies in their stories, 
which may give an indication that drugs may be hidden inside their vehicle.

"There are a lot of ways to determine what's going on. [Officers] 
have picked up specialties," Winward said. If all else fails, police 
can use a drug-sniffing dog to find what's hidden.

"I have heard of them [taking] a bed off a truck with a false bottom 
and [welding the bed] back on," he said. "They will have to take the 
truck apart to get the drugs out. That's the lengths they will go to 
to move the marijuana."

Authorities are not saying whether similar drug operations will be 
conducted on the state's freeways.

"We don't want to spoil the surprise if there is one," Winward said.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart