Pubdate: Wed, 17 Feb 1999 Source: Seattle Post-Intelligencer (WA) Copyright: 1999 Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Contact: http://www.seattle-pi.com/ Author: DAVID JOHNSTON, THE NEW YORK TIMES U.S. CUSTOMS IS HIGHLY VULNERABLE TO CORRUPTION, SAYS REPORT BY AGENCY WASHINGTON -- The front-line role of the Customs Service in the U.S. war against illegal drugs has left the agency highly vulnerable to narcotics-related corruption, Customs officials acknowledged yesterday in a report to Congress. The report, sent to a House panel with jurisdiction over the agency, admitted that the service had failed to aggressively combat corruption. In an atmosphere of neglect, internal affairs inquiries languished and were sometimes impeded because of infighting, the report said. The report is the service's most extensive and critical examination of how it deals with narcotics-related corruption and other internal affairs issues after years in which sporadic corruption cases have tarnished the image of an agency with 12,000 field inspection employees. "The large amounts of illegal drugs that pass through U.S. Customs land, sea and air ports of entry and the enormous amount of money at the disposal of drug traffickers to corrupt law enforcement personnel place Customs and its employees at great risk to corruption," the report said. Once focused on preventing the entry of illegal trade goods and farm products, the service has been thrust in recent years into broad responsibilities in interdicting narcotics, as inspectors monitor more than 300 ports of entry through which marijuana, cocaine, heroin and other illegal drugs flow into the United States. The report was ordered by lawmakers, but Customs officials said that the agency had taken the initiative to review its approach to corruption issues. But the report was sent to Congress at a time when lawmakers in the House and Senate are expected to critically examine the agency's internal affairs performance. The report sought to focus on corrective measures and Customs Commissioner Raymond Kelly, who is a former New York City police commissioner, said in an interview Tuesday that he had introduced a series of changes. He has elevated Internal Affairs so that it reports directly to him, ordered a tougher recruit screening system and sought to reduce the backlog of periodic personnel investigations. In addition yesterday, the agency announced the hiring of William Keefer, a former federal prosecutor, to head Internal Affairs. Keefer is replacing Homer Williams, a Customs official who was transferred after he became the subject of a federal inquiry in California into whether he told a colleague that she was under scrutiny in a corruption case. Referring to his experience as police commissioner in New York, Kelly said in a letter to Rep. Jim Kolbe, R-Ariz., chairman of an appropriations committee panel that monitors Customs, "I know that questions of integrity can erode public confidence in our law enforcement institutions." The report by the Customs Service's Office of Professional Responsibility sidestepped the issue of the extent to which corruption had already damaged the agency's effectiveness. Although the service opened more than 180 felony or misdemeanor cases against employees in 1997, the last year that statistics were available, Kelly said the Internal Affairs system was unable to precisely define the scope of the problem. The report did not uncover evidence of systematic corruption in its ranks, but did conclude that "individual acts of corruption have occurred and continue to occur" that placed the agency in danger of being undermined by its own employees. In the past decade, eight Customs officers have been convicted of taking payments from drug traffickers. In one case, in El Paso, Texas, two customs inspectors tried to shake down an informer posing as a drug smuggler, one of them demanding more than $1 million to look the other way when cocaine-laden vehicles crossed Juarez, the Mexican border city, into the United States. Federal counter-narcotics officials have said the level of corruption might be higher than the numbers suggest based on the frequency of drug intelligence reports indicating that federal agents on the border had been compromised. Moreover, the officials said the number of cases might be higher because the corruption often requires little involvement by an officer whose only overt activity is to turn away when a car carrying drugs pulls up at an inspection lane. Such cases are extremely difficult to detect, given the volume of cross-border traffic. In 1997, the last year statistics were available, the agency processed more than 400 million passengers and 17 million cargo shipments and seized about 400 tons of illegal drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck