Pubdate: Wed, 23 Sep 2009 Source: Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Copyright: 2009 The Arizona Republic Contact: http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/opinions/sendaletter.html Website: http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/24 Author: J. J. Hensley, Staff Writer DRUG VIOLENCE EASY TO FIND, AGENTS SAY They started slowly, infiltrating the vast Phoenix drug market with a team of all-stars, handpicked from around the nation. The federal agents came to Phoenix prepared to take on the rising tide of drug-related violence, where armed criminals are ready to kick in doors, rob armed drug-runners and shoot anyone who gets in the way. Their plan: Go undercover, lure in the violent crooks by soliciting them to rob drug dealers, then take them down. In the end, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agents arrested 70 people, seized about $39,000 and took dozens of guns and other weapons off the street, authorities said Tuesday. The arrests were only a dent in the problem, they said. What surprised them most was the number of people they found ready to join complete strangers for robbery and murder in Phoenix's drug underworld. "This proved what we know to be true," said Dennis Burke, the new U.S. attorney in the District of Arizona. "When drugs and distribution of drugs are in our neighborhoods, violent armed criminals follow behind them." The team of about a dozen special agents came because the spike in drug-related crime was becoming evident to law enforcement months before Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon told Congress about the home-invasion crisis in the Valley. By the time Gordon was telling a congressional committee in March about the estimated 366 abductions in Phoenix last year, the ATF was already preparing to send a team of experienced undercover agents to confront the roving strong-arm robbery crews targeting drug-stash houses in the area. A fast start Their first arrests showed the agents what they were up against. An undercover agent met with five suspects on the afternoon of June 11 in the parking lot of a hotel on Grand Avenue, a week after the men and the agent had met through a confidential informant. The men came prepared to rob nearly $500,000 worth of cocaine. They left in handcuffs. Agents discovered a 12-gauge shotgun, a semiautomatic handgun and a revolver in the car the men were driving, along with a bulletproof vest. Months later, the same scenario played out with one of the suspects pulling a handgun on an undercover agent moments before more than a dozen other agents swarmed the scene with their guns drawn to arrest the suspects. "They're not going to think twice about killing anybody who gets in their way," said Assistant Special Agent in Charge Jim Needles of the sting's targets. The undercover agents interviewed for this story could not be identified in order to protect their safety. Inevitable transition Phoenix's transition into a haven for drug crime was almost inevitable, experts say. With the county's population explosion now reaching 4 million, freeways followed, providing easy access to other major metropolitan areas. More drugs are being smuggled through Arizona because authorities have beefed up border security in other states. The amount of pot seized between the state's ports of entry has increased by nearly 85 percent in the past five years to more than 800,000 pounds. And the 2.7 million-acre Tohono O'odham Reservation, which straddles the Arizona-Mexico border, makes up a large part of the "remote, largely underprotected border area" that the National Drug Intelligence Center cites as a major reason Arizona has become a drug hub. Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard has said that a smuggler can get from the border to 59th Avenue and Baseline Road in southwest Phoenix without ever hitting pavement. The empty, cheap and foreclosure homes available as stash houses in the Valley compound those problems. Those factors draw in drug couriers from all over the country looking to pick up drugs or drop off money. Some of those criminals decide to stick around hoping to find an easy score in a drug-stash house with poorly armed guards. "It's going on all over the country but in certain parts more than others," said one undercover agent who has worked in Florida for nearly 20 years. Commitment issues An operation last week was the result of a chance encounter. An informant talked to some men who approached him outside a west Phoenix fast-food restaurant. Soon, the three men agreed they were interested in robbing a drug house. They returned the next day, and after a 15-minute conversation, they agreed to bring at least eight men to kill a couple of drug couriers in the process. ATF agents had them in their sights. The whole conversation had been monitored and recorded by agents in other vehicles in the parking lot. But when it came time for the entire group to meet for the heist, the men didn't show. One of the biggest challenges for agents was getting criminals to return to commit themselves to the deal. First, they had to agree to the heist while being monitored. Then, they had to return, armed and ready for the crime, allowing agents to arrest them on a combination of weapons and conspiracy charges. Though the robbers in last week's case backed out, the agents were confident they'd return. "They'll go wherever the profit is," said Pete Forcelli, an ATF supervisor in the Phoenix office. "Greed is their motivation, and the problem is they'll stop at nothing." Harsh sentences Out-of-state agents working with out-of-state confidential informants can make for a tough assignment, but court documents indicate the team set up its first successful sting within weeks of arriving in Phoenix in May. One longtime undercover agent from Chicago noted that in his city the gangs typically work among themselves, with Black street gangs targeting each other, for example. Phoenix is different, he said, with few allegiances among criminals and no shortage of willing robbers. One out-of-town confidential informant was able to set up a deal 90 minutes after he arrived in town. The stings frequently found robbery crews from different parts of the city working together to accomplish their common goal. "(Agents) are tripping all over these guys," the undercover agent said. The abundance of criminals and easy access to drugs means plenty of work will remain after these ATF agents have moved on. Needles said the Phoenix office is reorganizing so a group of agents will be available to deal with violent crime. Agents will now begin to use the threat of harsh federal sentences to seek information from the suspects already locked up. The agents said the cooperation of the U.S. Attorney's Office is essential to an operation like this because federal sentencing guidelines come with mandatory minimums attached to the types of gun-and-conspiracy charges the suspects are facing. The threat of sentences that can start at 10 to 15 years makes these types of criminals more willing to offer up information. "You're looking at 15 years' mandatory minimum. The only way out of that is to cooperate with the government," Forcelli said. "Usually, home-invasion crews are not your first-level criminals. They've been involved in other crime first." Forcelli worked with a similar crew in New York that started with two arrests and ended with 21 additional arrests that allowed officers to solve 145 robberies and six murders. Those are the kind of results the agency is counting on in Phoenix, Needles said. "This type of violent crime in the metropolitan area is out of control. These are hardened criminals, and we're not going to handle them with kid gloves." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr