Source: San Francisco Examiner (CA) Contact: http://www.examiner.com/ Pubdate: 31 Aug 1998 Author: Mark Helm EXAMINER WASHINGTON BUREAU U.S. DRUG CZAR WANTS BORDER WITH MEXICO TIGHTENED UP McCaffrey says federal agencies don't work together WASHINGTON -- Barry McCaffrey, the nation's director of drug policy, recalled his astonishment during his first tour of U.S.-Mexico border crossings two years ago. "You've got 800 people working at these border crossings," he said, "And nobody's in charge." At the checkpoints, McCaffrey saw Immigration and Naturalization Service agents patrolling some lanes, while U.S. Customs officials patrolled others. But the INS employees didn't share their findings with their customs counterparts, he said. McCaffrey also discovered that each agency had to follow separate union rules controlling how its inspectors would search vehicles. Officials at one agency were actually forbidden to open the trunks of cars -- a policy well known among drug dealers. Looking at the cars down the line, McCaffrey could "see drug dealers with binoculars watching the various lanes . . . to see where to drive their vehicles to avoid getting caught," he said. According to McCaffrey, drugs will continue to flow unimpeded across the border until America's federal and state agencies charged with fighting narcotics begin to work together. He will stress that point during a two-day visit to San Antonio starting Monday. "Nothing in life works without coordination," said the former four-star general, who directed policy and strategic planning for the Joint Chiefs of Staff before becoming the nation's drug czar in 1996. Coordination is a crucial component of a plan McCaffrey announced last Wednesday that would shore up federal anti-drug efforts along the 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border. Under the plan, huge portable X-ray machines capable of quickly scanning entire truck cargoes would be installed at each of the 39 crossings along the Southwest border by 2003. Currently, only six of the $3.5 million X-rays machines are in place. In addition, the plan calls for added fences, sensors, video cameras and lighting along the border. The plan also calls for boosting the number of border agents from 12,000 to 22,000. But the part of the plan that could prove most difficult to implement may be its call for more efficient use of drug-fighting personnel. Currently more than 50 federal and state agencies are involved in fighting narcotics. But the efforts of these agencies are hampered by poor communication and turf wars. McCaffrey's plan would create a regional drug czar, most likely based in El Paso, to coordinate law enforcement efforts of the 22 agencies most active in the area's anti-narcotics war. The plan also calls for coordinators at each of the 39 points of entry along the border, which stretches from Texas to California. McCaffrey said he expects the main fight over his Southwest initiative to come from agency heads reluctant to give up any control of their employees. The problem, he said, "will be in Washington among the departments and in Congress because there are separate congressional committees that support customs, DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration), etc." DEA and INS officials declined to comment on McCaffrey's proposal, referring questions to their parent agency, the Department of Justice. Justice Department spokesman Gregory King said officials there were "studying" the initiative. Although his plan has received a cool reception in Washington, McCaffrey said drug-fighting authorities and community leaders in the Southwest have supported it. "I've been up and down that border . . . and these people are prepared to move forward." The need for a tighter border is clear. More than 60 percent of the estimated 300 tons of cocaine and more than half of the methamphetamines and marijuana that enter the country each year are believed to pass through the U.S.-Mexico border. The U.S. Customs Service estimates that current interdiction efforts stop 10 percent to 20 percent of that drug flow. Local authorities put the number even lower. 1998 San Francisco Examiner - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski