Pubdate: Sat, 01 Nov 2008 Source: Watertown Daily Times (NY) Copyright: 2008 Watertown Daily Times Contact: http://www.wdt.net Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/792 Author: Steve Lester, Staff Writer LEGISLATORS ASK FOR FEDERAL DRUG ENFORCEMENT FUNDS The north country's three federal legislators on Friday submitted a formal application to bring federal drug enforcement money and resources to four area counties. Sens. Charles E. Schumer and Hillary Rodham Clinton and Rep. John M. McHugh asked the Office of National Drug Control Policy to include Franklin, St. Lawrence, Clinton and Jefferson counties as part of its High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area program. The program coordinates and helps federal, state and local law enforcement agencies disrupt the illegal drug trade. In particular for the north country, it would target cross-border smuggling and money laundering operations from Canada that distribute the drugs downstate to Syracuse, Albany and ultimately New York City for wider distribution. The New York/New Jersey HIDTA, with its main offices in Manhattan, includes 17 counties in New York and northeastern New Jersey. The New York portion includes all of New York City, the two outer counties of Long Island (Nassau and Suffolk), Westchester County, and four upstate counties that were added in 2007: Albany, Erie, Monroe and Onondaga. The three federal legislators said they consider the four counties mentioned in the application as "conducive for drug smuggling." The counties include 16 border crossings, three of which are among the 10 busiest on the northern border. The four counties also include international airports in Watertown, Plattsburgh, Ogdensburg and Massena among the 17 total. Three of the counties border the St. Lawrence River, which provides international shipping access to much of the U.S. via the Great Lakes St. Lawrence Seaway System. And the Akwesasne Mohawk Nation straddles the U.S-Canada border in Franklin County. "The addition of the Clinton, Franklin, Jefferson and St. Lawrence counties would play a critical role in reducing the flow of narcotics throughout New York, and into the rest of the United States - a goal on which we can all agree," the legislators wrote. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin