Pubdate: Sat, 29 Nov 2008 Source: Fresno Bee, The (CA) Copyright: 2008 The Fresno Bee Contact: http://www.fresnobee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/161 Author: Michael Doyle, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/joe+biden VALLEY ANIT-DRUG PROGRAM HONORED Successful Efforts Will Be Recognized Next Week In Washington. WASHINGTON -- The Central Valley's award-winning anti-drug forces will have some friends in the Obama administration. Incoming Vice President Joe Biden backs the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area program, which steers federal funds to regional anti-drug efforts. This could help the 10-county Central Valley HIDTA, which maintains a Fresno-based staff, prevail in the inevitable budget and bureaucratic fights to come. "Sen. Biden was a founding father of the HIDTA program and has maintained an interest in our operations over the years," said Bill Ruzzamenti, executive director of the Central Valley program. Several years ago, Ruzzamenti noted, Biden "was very active in our defense" when the Bush administration sought funding cuts and an agency merger. More generally, as a longtime Delaware senator, Biden embraces the kind of targeted law-enforcement grant programs deemed inefficient by Bush. "We're all waiting to see what's going to happen with the new administration," said Ruzzamenti, who will be in Washington starting Tuesday to pick up four drug-fighting awards, but "I am optimistic that the HIDTA program will do well." The Central Valley HIDTA runs from Shasta County in the north to Kern County in the south. It is one of 28 similar efforts nationwide, with the federal government spending about $225 million annually to coordinate federal, state and local law-enforcement campaigns. Congress first authorized the HIDTA programs in 1988, intending to target significant centers of illegal drug activity. Since then, urged on by lawmakers seeking local funds, the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy has designated HIDTAs covering more than half of the U.S. population. The White House Office of Management and Budget cautioned against expansion of the program without a review, so that limited resources could be allocated where they were most needed. "Many of them are doing a good job," White House drug office director John Walters told a House subcommittee last year. "But the problem is, it's got to be focused." The critique prompted Bush's effort to cut funding and combine HIDTA with other Justice Department programs. Bush's plan failed, and funding remains steady. Ruzzamenti now oversees several Fresno-based intelligence analysts and support personnel, and an annual federal budget totaling about $5 million a year. Begun in 1999 to target the region's rampant methamphetamine trade, the Valley program has since expanded to include major marijuana traffickers. "We no longer focus on the garden-tenders, but target their bosses and the individuals ultimately responsible who are at the top of the organizations and often living in Mexico," Ruzzamenti said. Some notable successes helped the Central Valley program garner the awards being presented next week by the White House drug czar's office. Federal prosecutor Kathleen Servatius, for instance, is being honored for her successful prosecution of the California Healthcare Collective, a Modesto-based purveyor of marijuana. The HIDTA organization worked with Drug Enforcement Administration agents to investigate the case. Officials are likewise honoring the state narcotics agents who, with HIDTA assistance, raided a large marijuana garden in Sequoia National Park last August. Wiretaps and undercover work led investigators to the plot near the small town of Sugarloaf, where 12,886 pot plants were seized. In a related vein, the Tulare County Sheriff's Department is picking up an award for Operation LOCCUST, which used more than 240 law-enforcement personnel to target more than 85 marijuana gardens flourishing on Sierra Nevada public lands. The fourth award honors Elk Grove law-enforcement officers. Said Ruzzamenti: "We've identified, targeted and dismantled more drug trafficking organizations than ever before." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin