Pubdate: Thu, 29 Mar 2007 Source: Star-Banner, The (Ocala, FL) Copyright: 2007 The Star-Banner Contact: http://www.starbanner.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1533 TAKING ON THE DRUG TRAFFICKERS Gerald Dandridge Jr. and Felipe Rosas both made front-page news in Ocala - Marion County last week. It wasn't good news. Dandridge was sentenced to 37 1/2 years in prison on March 21 for trafficking marijuana and cocaine in Marion County, as well as firearms and counterfeit currency violations. At the time of his arrest in July 2005, drug agents reported seizing $2.4 million worth of illegal drugs and estimated the ring was selling up to $2 million worth of cocaine and marijuana a week. They dubbed Dandridge the kingpin of the largest marijuana and cocaine ring in the history of our community. Rosas, meanwhile, was arrested and charged on March 18 with trafficking cocaine after police stopped him for speeding. During the traffic stop, police reported discovering 104 kilos of cocaine stashed in his Jeep. A later search of Rosas' house turned up another 39 kilos, according to reports, plus $800,000 in cash. The head of the city-county Multi- Agency Drug Enforcement Team, sheriff's Capt. Terry Bovaird, called it the biggest single drug bust in Marion County in his 23 years in local law enforcement. The two cases are clear indicators that drugs are a real and present danger in our community - in a very big way. That should not be a surprise to most, given Ocala/Marion County's surging population, its proximity to three of Florida's biggest metropolitan areas - Tampa Bay, Orlando and Jacksonville - and, maybe most important, its vast network of highways heading in virtually every direction. Add to that, as Sheriff Ed Dean pointed out, a diverse community where strangers and newcomers can easily assimilate, and our community is a perfect place for major drug trafficking organizations to set up a distribution point. While dope dealers see the advantages of our location, so do drug enforcement agencies. That's why a few years back Dean worked to convince federal officials to declare Marion County a High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA), and include it in what has become an 11- county regional task force that brings together federal, state and local drug units to target major drug traffickers. And it's having an impact here. Last year, the HIDTA Unified Drug Enforcement Strike Team based in Marion County worked 1,796 cases, made 863 felony arrests and filed 2,342 charges. All in all, according to UDEST statistics, the unit ultimately disrupted or dismantled 10 drug trafficking organizations. The HIDTA effort is significant not for the crime statistics it posts, but because it provides concentrated drug enforcement authority and resources backed by the full weight of the federal government, including a specially assigned federal prosecutor who specializes in drug cases. This unit focuses almost solely on major drug traffickers who are moving large volumes of drugs into or through Ocala/Marion County. That, in turn, frees up manpower and money at the Ocala Police Department and the Marion County Sheriff's Office for those agencies to focus on the smaller , street-level dealers through the Multi-Agency Drug Enforcement Team, Dean said, calling the paired effort of HIDTA and MADET a "one-two punch." "It allows you to leverage your local resources with agents from the DEA and FDLE, and that is invaluable," the sheriff said. Drug law enforcers have in recent years acknowledged a growing presence in Ocala/Marion County of major drug trafficking organizations, including the Mexican Mafia, which serves as pipeline to the Colombia drug cartels into the United States. So vigilance on the part of our local law enforcement agencies, in concert now with the broader authority and intelligence gathering capabilities of state and, especially, federal agencies, gives Ocala/Marion County a better chance of bringing people like Dandridge to justice - and getting the drugs they peddle in volume off of our streets. Dean, this year's chairman of the northeast Florida HIDTA Executive Board, was wise to seek Marion County's inclusion in the HIDTA fold. While OPD and the Sheriff's Office undoubtedly are active in trying deter drug activity in our community, there's no denying the advantages of having the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and, most important, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration working alongside them. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek