Source: Daily Record, The (NJ) Contact: http://www.dailyrecord.com/ Copyright: 1998 Gannett Satellite Information Network Inc. Pubdate: 28 Sep 1998 Author: Will Morton Daily Record Note: Item number 6 of 26 in the series "Heroin: A Clear and Present Danger" IN THE BELLIES OF `MULES,' A KILLER DRUG IS SMUGGLED Air travelers bring heroin into Newark [PHOTO CAPTION] Above, U.S. Customs Inspector Frank Reilly checks baggage at Newark International Airport. Below, heroin is often stored in latex pellets that are swallowed by smugglers, called `mules,' traveling from Colombia. Photos by Chris Pedota A 28-year-old American didn't look like a heroin smuggler when he passed through Newark International Airport. "At a distance, this gentleman looked like a yuppie," said Edward J. Morera, a Newark customs inspector. But a check of criminal records showed the part-time professional actor, on a flight with his pregnant wife from her native Colombia, had been arrested in 1983 for possession of three pounds of marijuana. The man also had new stitches on his face and odd stains on his clothes. His stomach and intestines were packed with 980 grams of heroin in 85 thumb-sized latex pellets he had swallowed one by one. Authorities later learned that in a desperate bid for money, he had agreed to carry drugs, then was beaten when he tried to change his mind. People have tried all sorts of ingenious methods to bring heroin into the country. Of the thousands of smugglers, authorities said, the largest group - -- 26 percent -- swallow dozens of latex sausages filled with heroin. Customs officials also have found drugs dissolved in liquor, packed inside wheelchair tubing, taped onto bodies, inside shoe heels and ice-packs, and glued under a wig. Only small amounts enter the United States in the mail or with cargo taken off ships and planes. Sometimes more than 10 pounds of heroin is found sewn into jacket linings and quilts, or hidden in false suitcase panels. Most heroin arrives as it did on that 1996 flight taken by the part-time actor -- in the stomachs and intestines of people who swallow an average of two pounds before they hop on a U.S.-bound plane, said John Varrone, the U.S. Customs Service's special agent in charge of the New York area. Half the time, the drug is stuffed into the cut-off finger of a rubber glove or into the bottom of a condom. The rest of the time, heroin has been packed by machine into latex casings, Morera said. The smugglers, called "mules," then enter the United States, excrete the drug pellets and turn them over to wholesalers who clean and sell the drug, Varrone said. In the early 1990s, more than 50 percent of America's heroin came from Nigeria. In 1993 and 1994, U.S. officials stemmed the tide by prohibiting Air Nigeria flights from Lagos, the capital, from landing at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York, Varrone said. Today, 70 percent of America's heroin comes from Colombia, where drug exports are harder to stop because smugglers hop-scotch between South American cities to mask their point of origin. One smuggler boarded a plane in Colombia and flew to Ecuador, Venezuela and Panama before a five-hour trip to New York, Morera said. And more smugglers are sneaking onto U.S. soil in Puerto Rico, where they then can travel freely, Varrone said. Between 5.5 and 6.6 tons of heroin are produced annually in South America, with most of it bound for the United States. Customs officials nationwide last year seized only about 1.2 tons, or 2,423 pounds. More than a third of that -- 914 pounds, or 37.3 percent of the total -- was seized in the New York area, mostly at Newark and John F. Kennedy. Customs officials check out all 3.3 million international passengers who touch down in Newark annually, identifying suspicious travelers based on names, birth dates, passport information and recent travel patterns transmitted electronically by foreign governments and 62 commercial airlines while the plane is in flight. Inspectors scan for further indications of illegal activity once a computer program flags suspicious passengers, but officials would not specify what they look for. "We want to use electronic information to identify passengers with the greatest risk," said William Brush, chief customs inspector at Newark. Officials also check passengers' criminal records against local and federal databases. Once a suspicious traveler's passport is inspected at the immigration desk - -- using a grocery-store style scanner on magnetic strips that are on most nations' passports -- an alarm is radioed to customs agents. Using a network of 22 cameras and viewing from behind mirrored glass, inspectors watch as travelers move through the customs hall. They radio a physical description to floor inspectors, who approach the suspects as they pick up their luggage and ask questions about their trip. "That will either confirm our suspicions or negate them," Brush said. Until about eight years ago, customs officials interviewed every arriving international passenger and were required to search at least one bag. But balancing demands for efficiency with higher foreign passenger traffic -- up 30 percent in the past year at Newark -- customs officials say they have streamlined operations with a goal of getting passengers from bag pickup to clearing customs within five minutes. Seizures have increased along with the number of passengers. In 1995, 60 pounds of heroin were seized at Newark. From Oct. 1, 1997 to Aug. 24 of this year, New York area authorities seized 131 pounds of heroin just from inside the bodies of 43 passengers. Although most travelers are unaware of it, Brush said, customs inspectors do not need warrants to search passengers coming into the country. Four percent of arriving international travelers at Newark are stopped and questioned, and only half of those arouse enough suspicion for inspectors to open bags or conduct pat-downs. Suspected drug swallowers then are taken to a hospital for X-rays. If drug pellets show up, their bowel movements are monitored until they excrete their illicit cargo. Sometimes smugglers are so packed with heroin that they pass the drug soon after landing. Some take Valium to calm nerves or anti-diarrhea medication to delay excretion. "We had one who didn't go to the bathroom for a week," Assistant Chief Inspector Stephen N. Greenberg said. Wholesalers who order heroin send $75,000 to $120,000 per kilo to the exporter, Morera said. The exporter pays the swallowers up to $20,000 per kilo -- $12 to $20 per gram. To people who normally earn $600 a month, it's like winning the lottery, Morera said. "It's mostly people who are destitute. They have no other means," Morera said. "These guys aren't the kingpins." The American actor had run out of money while in Colombia. He carried drugs in a desperate bid to get home, and later cooperated with authorities for a reduced sentence. Another carrier was a 20-year-old woman from a well-to-do upstate New York family. A college student, she was coming from Brazil. Officials suspect that her family cut her off financially so she carried drugs as a way to return home. Drug swallowers have ranged in age from 76 to a 13-year-old girl who was paid $2,000. Mules aren't allowed to touch what they swallow so drug-sniffing dogs won't smell it on their fingers, Morera said. Usually they are not allowed to see the pile of 50 to 100 heroin packets they are going to choke down for fear they will balk at swallowing such huge amounts. They are given the packets one at a time. One man, apprehended Aug. 17 at John F. Kennedy on a flight from West Africa, had ingested 75 heroin sausages weighing a total of 1.93 pounds. The record goes to a 30-year-old man who flew from Colombia to John F. Kennedy in 1989 after swallowing 4.6 pounds of cocaine in 156 latex pellets. The women's record holder is a 34-year-old who traveled from Colombia to John F. Kennedy in 1991 stuffed with 3.9 pounds of heroin in 101 condoms. Customs officials say they need more money and more employees to increase arrests and crimp the current heroin wave. While the number of inspectors searching baggage has increased nearly tenfold in the past decade -- from six to 56 in Newark -- international passengers have multiplied by about 30 times in that period, Brush said. Authorities also need greater flexibility in moving agents around when it appears more drugs are coming into certain American cities. Because drug cartels change their routes and have many South American cities from which they export to the New York area, a complex web of routes creates a difficult problem compared to the single route from Nigeria to New York. Customs officials are working with airlines and law agencies to get more cooperation on pre-landing passenger checks. Brush said he wants to change the computer system to highlight suspicious passengers who travel frequently, but he would not reveal other strategies. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski