Pubdate: Tue, 10 Aug 2010 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2010 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: Dane Schiller, Houston Chronicle Note: MAP archives articles exactly as published, except that our editors may redact the names and addresses of accused persons who have not been convicted of a crime, if those named are not otherwise public figures or officials. FEDS SAY STORE OWNER LIVED A DOUBLE LIFE Son Calls [name1 redacted] A Family Man, But Agents Link 'Z' To Meth From Mexico [name1 redacted] owns convenience stores and a home in suburban Sugar Land, and he has two kids in college - one a medical student. If federal agents have it right, the 54-year-old who emigrated from Pakistan more than 20 years ago also lived a double life. Far from his family residence on a tree-lined street was a string of younger lovers, a drug habit and a Houston condo, from which he allegedly dispensed wildly addictive methamphetamine over games of pool. A federal indictment borne from Operation Agent Orange states the man known as "Z" is part of a 35-person plot that connects Houston to Mexico. All face at least 10 years and as long as life in prison if convicted in the drug-trafficking conspiracy. "It is a large organization, as large as they come for crystal meth on this side (of the border)," testified Agent John Schwartz, of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. The array of alleged conspirators includes rookies and street-hardened criminals. [name2 redacted] , 31, served time with the Texas Youth Commission for capital murder. He co-owns and runs a sports bar. [name2 redacted] , 30, is charged along with six family members, accused of being the Mexico connection and described as keenly street smart and adept at avoiding detection. [name4 redacted] , 43, owns a home in Houston. After supposedly doing well in the drug business, he bought a home in the country and allegedly sustained himself by continued dealing. The size of the ring likely made for a lot of money and a lot of dealing, but it might also have been its own undoing, said Tom Melsheimer, a former federal prosecutor who is now a Dallas-based defense attorney. "If the conspiracy is too broad and too involved, that is often a reason why it is uncovered," he said. "You have weak links. You have people you don't know particularly well, you can't trust particularly well." According to court documents, [name1 redacted] was far from the big time. But his alleged role selling to dealers and users shows in part how Mexico-made meth has saturated Houston. The meth dealt by Z at a low-key condominium on Fondren Road was 50 percent more potent than typical meth sold in the United States, according to authorities. The price has climbed steadily in Houston's streets, jumping 20 percent in 2009 to as much as $24,000 a pound, according to a recent federal report. That is twice the value of cocaine and 50 times that of Mexican marijuana, the most prevalent drug in Houston. Imported Drugs Most of the meth here is made in Mexico. The amount confiscated spiked last year and is expected to increase again, according to an assessment by Houston's High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area, which coordinates anti-trafficking efforts for an array of agencies. Schwartz, who went undercover to catch Z and others, said Z had a preferred way of doing business. "When he sells drugs to customers, he likes to relax and play a game of pool," Schwartz said. If the pool went well and Z was comfortable, that's all it took. Sometimes a little Johnny Walker Scotch whisky on ice was involved. He seemed to trust just about everyone but had burglar bars installed to thwart a stream of home invasions. Undercover DEA agents pretended to be organized crime gangsters from out of state and used a hidden camera to secretly record inside Z's condo. There were guns with serial numbers filed off inside the residence, and [name1 redacted] talked of having a contact that could get him a passport in as little as two hours if he needed to slip out of the United States. One of Z's alleged girlfriends at the time, Ashley Henry, 24, weighed drugs, counted money and held bills up to the light to make sure they were real, he said. She was recorded talking on the phone with another conspirator as she bragged of having connections in the Aryan Brotherhood and asked if he could hook her up with members of the Houstones, an especially large gang also started in prison. She also said she recently had her gun stolen and wanted to kill someone who had crossed her on a deal, according to testimony. Son Defends [name1 redacted] The [name1 redacted] described by agents is not the man his family knows, said his 22-year-old son. He described a father married for more than 25 years to a woman who is home-bound, but he "stuck with her through thick and thin." Well spoken and direct, the son said his father was grateful to live in America. "Everything we have earned, everything we have, the entire American dream, my dad has achieved here," he said. "From what I know, my dad is a very peaceful man, a joyful guy, and would never do any harm to anybody," Banks Kerr, admissions director at the Bay Area Recovery Center, which treats drug abuse, said it doesn't take much for a person's life to be torn apart by meth. "There have been recreational users of methamphetamine, but those stories are few and far between," he said. "It is not like a high school kid drinking a Budweiser or smoking a joint, where he can take it or leave it." A new user could quickly get addicted snorting amounts so small they'd be about the size of a pin laid on its side. "Once they use it, they feel like Superman; it just makes them feel invincible, like they can do anything," Kerr said. "Eventually, they become dependent on it and feel like they can't function without it." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D