Pubdate: Sun, 9 Mar 2008 Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) Copyright: 2008 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Contact: http://www.ajc.com/opinion/content/opinion/letters/sendletter.html Website: http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28 Author: Steve Visser Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) FEDERAL VICE AGENTS TOUT SUCCESSES Metro Atlanta may get a little bloodier. Call it a sign of success. Jack Killorin, who heads a federal narcotics task force, said his agents are rolling up drug-trafficking organizations to the point that they have decreased the quality and raised the price of drugs on the street. He credits last year's spike in area burglaries, robberies and car thefts in part to criminals forced to pay more for their illicit drugs. If law enforcement someday succeeds in breaking up established drug territories - the real sign of success from a metropolitan perspective - it could mean a similar spike in murders, as drug organizations vie for a larger market share. "If the market here gets unstable down to the street, then the streets will get bloody," said Killorin, director of Atlanta High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area Task Force (HIDTA). "I don't think we're there yet." He isn't praying for bloodshed - even if it results in the bad guys only shooting each other. The last thing he wants is Atlanta to look like Miami in the mid-1980s. It already looks too much like that for his taste. Killorin and his kindred have dubbed metro Atlanta the "Miami Vice" of the 21st century, quipping that if TV detectives Sonny Crockett and Rico Tubbs went undercover today, it would be in Gwinnett, Fulton, Cobb and DeKalb counties. The region may lack cigarette boats, South Beach and bikini-clad bodies, but it is loaded with cocaine - along with methamphetamine, marijuana and heroin - and guns and gangsters. Metro Atlanta has always served as a drug distribution point for the South, whether it was moonshine in the 1940s or cocaine in the 1980s But in recent years, it has taken on the role of a national distribution center, warehousing illicit drugs and filling orders for shipments to Eastern and Midwestern cities. "These are guys who are dealing with hundreds of kilos at a time and millions of dollars a month," Killorin said. "These are big-time players." He can point to several coups he and his 100-plus agents, drawn from various local, state and federal police, have tallied. The most recent was in December, when, working with the Drug Enforcement Administration, they shut down two trafficking operations, seizing millions of dollars in drugs and $10 million in cash. "The organizations we are looking at here are global operations," said Rodney Benson, special agent in charge of DEA's Atlanta office. "The lion's share of the narcotics is originating from Mexican drug-trafficking operations. Their representatives are deployed up here to warehouse the shipments." Metro Atlanta became an outpost of organized crime for reasons of geography, logistics and immigration. It also has a strong and diverse market for drugs - powder cocaine for the suburbs, crack cocaine for the city, crystal meth for the exurbs and Ecstasy for Midtown raves - for the cartels to fill, Killorin said. Moreover, the region is a transportation hub - by rail, air and interstate highways and even by sea, by way of Savannah - to make it a natural distribution point, whether to New Jersey or Chicago. "We've got the busiest airport. We've got three major interstates passing through. We're just accessible," said Atlanta Police Lt. Robert Browning, deputy director of HIDTA. "It is not that the drugs are coming to Atlanta and stopping. This is the transportation route for the whole East Coast." The reason is simple logistics. Cocaine is still manufactured in South America, but instead of being shipped directly to the U.S. by plane or ship - as was the case in the Miami Vice heyday - the Columbia cartels are now selling it to Mexican cartels. Those organizations then ship it, along with marijuana, methamphetamine and heroin, to Atlanta, a major metro area with a large Hispanic population in which the traffickers can hide. They often hide shipments in cargos of legitimate goods that thousands of trucks ferry across the border each day. Drug shipments even have been hidden with truckloads of produce bound for the state Farmer's Market in Forest Park, according to the 2007 HIDTA annual report. The cartels' operatives in metro Atlanta repackage the drugs for distribution in the region or shipment elsewhere, Benson said. Then, millions in dollars are transported back to Atlanta, where the cash is packed and shipped to Mexico. The trafficking organizations rent houses in affluent neighborhoods in Cobb and Gwinnett counties that shield them from surveillance because they're on large, private lots, the HIDTA report noted. "We see a lot of stash houses in suburban neighborhoods," Benson said. Gwinnett, in particular, has been the center for major raids involving methamphetamine, marijuana and cocaine. Authorities have found homes in Buford, Norcross and Dacula that did not have much furniture but had large caches of drugs. DEA agents in the last three years have made two of the largest seizures of methamphetamine on the East Coast in Gwinnett. In Buford, $50 million worth of crystal meth was seized in 2006, which topped a previous record set in Lawrenceville, where $17 million of crystal meth was seized in 2005. Killorin noted Georgia passed a law in 2005 restricting the sale of pseudoephedrine, a necessary ingredient for methamphetamine production, in response to the meth epidemic sweeping rural Georgia. The law substantially undermined local production, but the Mexican cartels easily filled the void, possibly even increasing the amount of the drug available. "Instead of mom and pop labs, we are now looking at product coming from what could only be described as industrial-size labs in Mexico," Killorin said. "The north Georgia meth producers are almost a historical reference." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake