Pubdate: Tue, 25 May 1999 Source: Washington Post (DC) Page: A12 Copyright: 1999 The Washington Post Company Address: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071 Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: Douglas Farah, Washington Post Foreign Service IN THIS CASE, CUBA-U.S. TEAMWORK NETTED BIG SCORE HAVANA - On Oct. 1, 1996, U.S. Coast Guard officers watched in frustration as the Honduras-registered freighter Limerick -- sinking, abandoned and carrying a large quantity of cocaine -- drifted into Cuban waters and seemingly out of their reach. As it happened, however, the Cuban government was more than willing to help. Alerted by a Coast Guard request relayed through British diplomatic channels, Cuban authorities hauled the ship to shore and -- with help from U.S. law enforcement agents -- discovered the hidden cargo, which they turned over to U.S. authorities for use in the trial of the ship's captain and crew. Cuban border guards even flew to Miami to testify. "They were really very cooperative," said James Milford, who was the DEA's deputy director at the time. "Any way you look at it, they deserve a lot of credit." The United States continues to bar most trade with Cuba, and the countries have not had diplomatic relations since 1961. But law enforcement officials in both countries say the unprecedented level of cooperation in the Limerick case shows how political differences can be set aside in pursuit of a common goal. The case began when the Coast Guard, acting on an intelligence tip, stopped the freighter in international waters north of Cuba on suspicion that it was carrying two tons of cocaine. But as a Coast Guard party boarded the ship, the 11-man crew tried to scuttle it, forcing the Coast Guard to evacuate the crew and abandon the vessel. Using the British as intermediaries, the Coast Guard asked the Cuban border patrol to try to salvage the 220-foot ship, which had drifted into Cuban territory, was taking on water and was about to sink, according to U.S., British and Cuban officials. The Cubans agreed and towed the ship to shore. Acting on U.S. intelligence, Cuban authorities began dismantling the ship and discovered a hidden cache of about two tons of cocaine, according to Lt. Col. Oscar Garcia, deputy commander of Cuba's anti-drug police. The United States subsequently passed along new intelligence indicating that even more cocaine might be concealed on the ship, whose voyage had originated in Barranquilla, Colombia. The Cubans agreed to let U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and Justice Department officials join them in the first joint counter-drug operation between the two countries, according to U.S. and Cuban officials. After spending two weeks dismantling the ship, investigators from the two countries discovered six more tons of cocaine, for a total haul of eight tons -- one of the largest cocaine seizures in history. The DEA dispatched planes to Cuba to carry the evidence back to Miami. After what officials described as a heated debate within the Justice Department, the DEA was authorized to ask Cuba to provide testimony in the case. Cuba sent four border patrol guards to Miami, where they were kept under heavy security during their week-long stay because of threats from Cuban Americans, U.S. and Cuban officials said. The captain and chief engineer of the Limerick, both Colombians, were convicted in June 1997 on drug charges and sentenced to 30 years in prison. The other crew members were not tried. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D