Pubdate: Friday, September 3, 1999 Source: Toronto Sun (Canada) Copyright: 1999, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.canoe.ca/TorontoSun/ Forum: http://www.canoe.ca/Chat/newsgroups.html UNDERWORLD AROUND THE WORLD Mobsters Form International Cartels: Cops GARMISCH-PARTENKIRCHEN, Germany -- From Russian gangs to the Sicilian mafia, the world's organized crime networks are increasingly working together in alliances that transcend borders and ethnic ties, law enforcement leaders said yesterday. At a conference on organized crime in this Alpine resort town, law enforcement experts have come from 22 countries to talk about ways to combat mobs worldwide. "(The gangs) don't discriminate against groups. They only have one issue and that's how much profit they can make," said Tom Pickard, assistant director of the FBI. Conventional drug supply routes are meaningless now, Pickard said. Police are seeing narcotics moving freely around the world, from South America to Europe and from Europe to the United States. Thomas Fuentes, section chief for organized crime at the FBI, said cases he sees now can transcend as many as 25 different jurisdictions. And it's not just conventional street crime such as prostitution or drugs that the mafia groups are involved in, he said. Groups such as Russian organized crime "are able to operate at the highest levels to threaten our banking systems, our governments," Fuentes said. The Russian delegation proposed annual meetings of police and security officials from around the world to assess common problems. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart