Pubdate: Tue, 09 Nov 1999 Source: Irish Independent (Ireland) Copyright: Independent Newspapers (Ireland) Ltd Contact: http://www.independent.ie/ Author: Tom Brady PASSENGER PROFILING PAYS OFF IN DRUGS WAR For the past two years Ireland has been used as a back-door route into Europe by international crime gangs trafficking in cocaine. Ireland is an ideal transit point for gangs concentrating on the highly lucrative British and mainland European markets because of its location as an island on the edge of the continent and its rugged coastline. Most of the major shipments in the past have been comprised of cannabis although there have been occasional shipments of other drugs. But since late 1997, gardai believe the country has been specifically targeted by well organised gangs with contacts in three continents. They are concentrating on cocaine to meet the apparent growth in demand for the white powder which is no longer a weekend recreational drug for high-flyers. At the heart of the operation is a key coterie of Nigerians who have set up four or five groups of professional couriers to ship the cocaine across Europe while avoiding the increasingly sophisticated methods set up by international police and customs agencies to nab the carriers through profiling airline passengers. The profiling system, which is operated successfully in several countries, concentrates on passengers who fit into certain categories or build up unusual patterns in terms of flight bookings or destinations. Ironically, the suspected courier stopped at Dublin airport with four kilos of cocaine on Sunday was not immediately obvious from profiling although he had travelled to Dublin from Peru via Madrid. The 37-year-old white South African was detained by a garda immigration officer, who was a former member of the national drugs unit, because he believed the passenger was acting suspiciously. When the officer carried out a search he found the cocaine hidden in two catering fruit cocktail tins which were in the passenger's hand luggage. The gangs attempt to circumvent the profiling system by hopping on and off flights across Europe. Most of the flights into Dublin have been through Frankfurt although Madrid was used on Sunday and Amsterdam has also been on the flight path in the past. MASTERMIND The criminal mastermind behind the racket is a Nigerian living in London while the Irish side of the operation is being handled by another Nigerian living in Dublin. The group has links with a Colombian drug cartel and can purchase the cocaine for ``next to nothing'' in Peru. The small outlay means that if even a few shipments reach the street market successfully, the gang has made a sizeable profit. Sunday's seizure was the third cocaine shipment brought in by the Nigerian controlled gangs to be intercepted by the Garda national drugs unit and the Customs drug unit in the past couple of months. But previously Gardai discovered that Nigerian couriers were ``swallowing'' pellets of cocaine paste and bringing them in on flights into Shannon airport. This route was smashed by a series of raids and finds last year in the Shannon-Limerick region. Nigerians based in this country are also reputed to be heavily involved in the racket and the same group is suspected of being responsible for a spate of scams with stolen credit cards. A number of them are also carrying asylum cards and using false identity documents while a relatively minor scam involves sidetracking the billing system for a telephone at a location in north Kildare and charging friends and acquaintances calling families overseas. Cocaine is estimated to have a street value here of about pounds 80,000 a kilo but gardai accept that the ``incredibly high'' level of purity emerging from forensic examinations of the Peruvian shipments has meant that any of the shipments that have slipped through will be cut and mixed with talcum powder and other substances up to half a dozen times. The shipment of four kilos seized on Sunday has been estimated to be worth a conservative pounds 500,000 but gardai are satisfied that after examination the final value will be well in excess of double that figure. And since some of the shipment is thought to have been destined for private parties organised to coincide with the MTV awards ceremony in Dublin on Thursday night it is likely that its value to the traffickers would have increased again. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea