'INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL: A HIGH-PRIORITY PROGRAM ADDRESS BY SHELDON B. VANCE. DEPARTMENT OF STATE BULLETIN, JANUARY 27, 1975.

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CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1
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May 1, 1975
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Approved For Release I 9991 51O2Ct 11A-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 International Narcotics Control: A High-Priority Program Address by Sheldon B. Vance' Alcohol and drug problems are genuine concerns of anyone with management re- sponsibilities, and in this sense my personal involvement is not new. However, my inter- est has been more immediate and full time since early this year when Secretary Kissin- ger named me his Senior Adviser on Nar- cotics Matters. The Federal international narcotics con- trol program is a combined effort of several U.S. agencies, operating within the frame- work of the Cabinet Committee on Interna- tional Narcotics Control, which is chaired by Secretary of State Kissinger. I also serve as the Executive Director of the Cabinet Com- mittee and therefore direct or coordinate, un- der the President's and Secretary's control, what our Federal Government is attempting to do abroad in this field, whether in the en- forcement, treatment, or prevention areas. illy remarks today will not address alcohol abuse, not because we believe alcohol a lesser or insignificant problem-we definitely do not-hut because our international narcotics control program does not extend to alcohol. The Cabinet Committee was, in fact, formed largely in response to the tragic victimization of American youth by heroin traflickers in the late 1960's and early 1970's. As you know, the same period also saw a sharp rise in the abuse of other drugs over which we seek tighter controls, including marihuana, hash- ish, cocaine, amphetamines, barbiturates, ' Made before the North American Congress on Al- cohol and Drug Problems at San Francisco, Calif., on Dec. 17. Ambassador Vance is Senior Adviser to the Secretary of State and Coordinator for Interna- tional Narcotics Matters. tranquilizers, and LSD and other hallucino- gens. Poly-drug abuse, the mixing or alter- nating consumption of different drugs, also emerged as a problem requiring special at- tention. The American drug scene is not confined to our borders. It extends to our military forces and other Americans residing abroad, as well as to tourists. As of September 30 of this year, 1,289 U.S. citizens were languish- ing in foreign prisons on narcotics charges, principally in Mexico, Germany, Spain, and Canada. The 1,289 compares with the figure of 2.12 in September of 1969. However hard we fight the problem of drug abuse at home, we cannot move signifi- cantly to solve it unless we succeed in win- ning and maintaining comprehensive and ef- fective cooperation of foreign governments. Some of the key drugs of abuse originate in foreign countries. There is a legitimate need for opium as a source for codeine and other medicinal compounds, but illicit opium- from which heroin can be processed-has been produced in such countries as Turkey (prior to its ban), Afghanistan, Pakistan, Burma, Thailand, Laos, and neighboring Mexico. Opium is also being produced legally in India and Turkey for export and in Iran and a number of other countries for domestic medical and research utilization. Some idea of the dimensions of our prob- lem can be gained when we consider that the world's annual legal production of opium is close to 1,500 tons and illegal production is estimated at 1,200 tons. Similarly, the co- caine used in the United States is of foreign origin, produced as the coca plant princi- Department of Stag Bulletin January 27, 1975 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 pally in Bolivia, Peru, and Ecuador. Colom- bia transforms more coca paste into cocaine than other countries. Cannabis, from which we get marihuana and hashish, is both im- ported and grown in the United States; the biggest supplier of the U.S. market is Mex- ico, followed by Jamaica. We have had our problems with U.S.-man- ufactured amphetamines, barbiturates, and other mind-bending drugs. We are attempt- ing to deal with the U.S. sources through do- mestic measures, but for the foreign sub- stances we must look to other governments for cooperation. Frequently, it has been a case of persuading them that the problem is not just ours but is also theirs. We have been increasingly successful in these efforts since mid-1971, when stopping the flow of narcotics to the United States- with emphasis on heroin and cocaine-be- came one of our principal foreign policy ob- jectives. At that time, the Department of State was assigned the primary responsibil- ity for developing an intensified interna- tional narcotics control effort and for man- aging the expenditures under the program. To encourage cooperation from other gov- ernments and to assist them and internation- al organizations to strengthen their antidrug capabilities, we have provided an annual average of $22 million in grant assistance over the past three years. Our request for international control funds for the current fiscal year is $42.5 million. Our bilateral programs emphasize cooperative law enforce- ment and exchange of intelligence. The ma- jor categories of grant assistance are train- ing programs and equipment for foreign en- forcement personnel and financial assistance for crop substitution and related agricul- tural projects. We are also exploring useful cooperative ventures in the fields of drug abuse education, treatment, and prevention. During the past two months, I visited many of the countries in Latin America, the Near East, and Asia to examine our pro- grams and look for ways to strengthen them. I can report that all of these governments expressed a sincere willingness to help stamp out illicit production and trafficking. But these governments also face serious internal problems. The opium poppy, for example, usually flourishes in the more isolated areas where central government control is weak or nonexistent. In many areas it is the only casli crop of unbelievably poor tribesmen, and it also provides their only medication and relief from serious disease and hardship. On my trip I saw something of the poppy- growing areas in Afghanistan in Badakshan and Nangarhar Provinces and of the Buner and Swahi poppy-producing areas of Pali. istan's Northwest Frontier Province when x drove from Kabul, Afghanistan, to Peshai- war, Pakistan, through the Kabul Gorge and Khyber Pass and then went on to Islamabad by Pakistani Government helicopter. I also helicoptered over the northern mountains of Thailand, where the Meo hill tribes grow opium like the tribesmen in the neighborini mountains of Burma and Laos in what is called the Golden Triangle. The experience vividly demonstrated to mp' the conditions which make it very difliculIt for these governments-despite a genuine desire to stamp out illegal opium-to control production effectively any time soon. We and producing countries cannot expect to see a high degree of success in our cooperative en- forcement efforts until significant adjust- ments are made in the social attitudes and economic conditions in the opium-growing areas. Western Hemisphere Control Programs Mexico-Today, the number-one priority country in our international narcotics cone trol efforts is Mexico. The Mexican opium crop and heroin laboratories are the current source of more than half of the heroin on our streets. The so-called Alexican brown heroin has not only moved into our largest cities but is also spreading to some of the smaller cities throughout our country. When Presi- dent Ford met with President Echeverria in October, narcotics control was very high on their agenda and they agreed that an even more intensified joint effort is needed. The Mexican Government under President Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194AO00100400001-1 Echeverrfa has assigned high priority to its antidrug campaign and has directed Attor- ney General Pedro Ojeda Paullada to coor- dinate its eradication and control efforts. We are helping them by providing air- craft, mainly helicopters, to assist in the eradication of opium poppy cultivation in the western mountains. This cultivation is il- legal in Mexico, and there is no question of the Mexican Government offering income substitution to the farmer. There is also a crash program to strengthen antismuggling controls on both sides of the border. Our crooks smuggle guns and appliances into Mexico, in coordination wjth their crooks who supply ours with heroin and marihuana. U.S.-Mexican cooperative measures are pay- ing off, but much remains to be done before illicit trafficking can he reduced in a major way. For fiscal year 1975, about $10 million, or almost one-quarter, of our international nar- cotics control funds are being allocated to the Mexican program. Our Mexican neighbors are spending much more. AIy colleague John Bartels, Administrator of the Drug Enforce- ment Administration (DEA), and I meet three or four times a year with Our friend Pedro Ojeda Paullada, either in Mexico City or Washington, in order to coordinate our respective efforts. Colombia-A country with extensive coast- lines and huge land areas, Colombia is the major transit point for illegal shipments of cocaine entering the U.S. market. The Co- lombian Government has launched a great effort to eliminate the criminal element, to combat drug trafficking, and to crack down on the laboratories processing coca base smuggled in from Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, and Chile. The United States is moving for- ward with an assistance program tailored to help the new Colombian Government thrust. We are furnishing such enforcement items as jeeps, motorcycles, radios, and laboratory equipment. We are also providing antinar- cotics technical training for the Judicial Po- lice, the National Police, and Customs. Jamaica-This Caribbean island has emerged as a major supplier of marihuana to the United States, surpassed only by Mex- ico. Moreover, there is evidence that Jamaica is a transit point for the smuggling of co- caine and heroin to our country from South America. Within the past year, the Jamaican Government has undertaken major steps to curb illicit drug activities. In response to ur- gent requests for assistance from the Jamai- can Government, U.S. technical assistance and equipment was extended to a Jamaican task, force set up to intercept boats and air- craft engaged in narcotics smuggling, to dis- rupt trafficking rings, and to destroy commer- cial marihuana cultivation. Well over (100,000 pounds of commercially grown marihuana have.been destroyed thus far. U.S. support consists of loaning of helicopters and trans- fers of communications equipment and in- vestigative-enforcement aids together with training and technical assistance. The Situation in Turkey Turkey-In 1971, with the realization that a substantial amount of opium legally pro- duced in Turkey was being diverted to illicit narcotics trafficking, the Turkish Govern- ment concluded that a total ban on poppy growing would be the most effective way to stop the leakage. However, the Turkish Gov- ernment which assumed office in January 1974 reconsidered the ban, amid great in- ternal political debate, and on July 1 re- scinded it on the grounds that what is grown in Turkey is a sovereign decision of the Turks. In high-level dialogue between our two governments we have made clear our very deep concern at the possibility of a renewed massive flow of heroin from Turkish opium to the United States. We stressed our hope they would adopt effective controls. A spe- cial U.N. team held discussions on this sub- ject in Turkey on the invitation of the Turk- ish Government, which has stated publicly many times that it will not allow its resump- tion of poppy cultivation to injure other peo- ples. In mid-September, the Turkish Govern- ment issued a statement that it would adopt Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194AO00100400001-1 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 a method of harvesting the poppies called the poppy straw process, which involves the col- lection by the Turkish Government of the whole poppy pod rather than opium gum. This was the procedure recommended by the U.N. experts. Traditionally, the opium gum was taken by the farmers through lancing the pod in the field, and it was a portion of this gum that was illegally bought by the traffickers. Last month I talked with senior Turkish Government officials and with police officials. The word has moved all the way down the chain to the poppy farmer that opium gum production is definitely proliibited, and the enforcement mechanism is moving into place. Turkey and the tT.N. narcotics organization are cooperating fully in this effort, and all will be watching closely to endeavor to pre- vent and to head off diversions into the illicit traffic. Southeast Asia-The Golden Triangle area, where Burma, Laos, and Thailand come together, is the largest source of illicit opium in the world, with an estimated annual pro- duction of 600-700 tons. Most of this produc- tion is consumed by opium or heroin smokers in Southeast Asia. Since 1970, when heroin processed from opium in Golden Triangle re- fineries began to become widely available to U.S. troops in Viet-Nam, we have been con- cerned that heroin from this source would increasingly reach the United States, espe- cially as the ban on opium production in Tur- key and disruption efforts along the way dried up the traditional Middle Eastern- European route to the United States. For the past three years, therefore, we have made Southeast Asia a major object of our international control efforts. We have de- voted a significant share of our suppression efforts and resources to our cooperative pro- grams in Thailand, Laos, Viet-Nam, the Phil- ippines, and Hong Kong. The biggest concen- tration has been in Thailand, which serves as the major transit area for Burmese-origin opium. A recent series of agreements for U.S. assistance to Thailand include helicop ters, communications equipment, vehicles;, and training programs. Important steps were also taken on the income-substitution sidel, including the approval of an aerial survey of northern Thailand, where opium is grown by! the hill tribes. In Burma, the government has stepped up its antinarcotics efforts. For fiscal year 1975, Southeast Asia will account for over $10 million of our international nar- cotics control funds. While our joint suppression efforts are making some headway in Southeast Asia, we should not view the situation there through rose-colored glasses. Anti narcotics efforts ii Southeast Asia run up against several unique problems. Burma and Thailand are threat'. ened by insurgent groups which control or harass large areas of the opium-growing re- gions. The governments have limited re- sources and few trained personnel available for narcotics control. In addition, the lack of internal security hampers police action and intelligence operations against traffickers;. The Government of Burma, for example, doe' not have effective administrative control over a significant portion of the area where most Asian poppies are grown. The topography of the Golden Triangle area is mountainous, wild, and uncontrollat ble. When one smuggling route is uncovered and plugged by police and customs teams, the traffickers can easily detour to alternate routes and modes of transportation. We need only look at the difficulties that our own well. trained and well-equipped law enforcement agencies have in blocking narcotics traffic across our clearly defined peaceful border! with Mexico to gain a better appreciation of the difficulties in Southeast Asia. Moreover, use of opium has been tolerated in the area, and opium has been regarded as a legitimate commodity of commerce for cent turies under both colonial and indigenous governments. For the hill tribes, opium is still the principal source of medicinal relief for endemic diseases and is also the most lu. crative crop to sell or barter for basic necest sities. We are actively seeking alternative crops and other sources of income for these Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 peoples, in close cooperation with similar ef- forts by the U.N. narcotics organizations; but progress will be slow, as a way of life of primitive and remote peoples must he mod- ified. And so the situation in Southeast Asia is complex and long term. Multilateral Approaches Concurrently with our bilateral action pro- grams, we have given full support to the multilateral or international efforts in the fight against illicit narcotics production and trafficking. For example, the United States was a lead- ing proponent of the establishment of the United Nations Fund for Drug Abuse Con- trol. To date, we have contributed $10 million of the $13.:i million made available to the Fund by all countries. In Thailand, the Fund is assisting in a comprehensive program de- signed to develop alternate economic oppor- tunities for those who grow opium; the Fund has a similar project in Lebanon for the de- velopment of alternatives to cannabis pro- duction. Within the past year, the Fund has financed a \Vorld Health Organization world- wide study of the epidemiology of drug de- pendence which we hope will contribute to- ward clarifying the nature of the problem we seek to solve. It is also financing treatment and rehabilitation activities for drug addicts in Thailand, fellowships and consultancies in rehabilitation in various countries, and semi- nars on community rehabilitation programs in Europe. The U.S. Government has also taken a leading role in formulating two major pieces of international narcotics legislation. The first relates to the 19ti1 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs. I am happy to report that the U.S.-sponsored amending protocol, which would considerably strengthen controls over illicit production and trafficking, has been ratified by 32 of the 40 countries necessary for its coming into force. The United States was one of the first countries to ratify the protocol, on November 1, 1972. The second major area of international legislation pertains to the Convention on Psy- chotropic Substances, which would provide international control over LSD and other hallucinogens, the amphetamines, barbitu- rates, and tranquilizers. The administration submitted the convention to the Senate in mid-1971 with a request for its ratification. We are now waiting for congressional ap- proval of the proposed enabling domestic legislation that would pave the way for rati- fication of this essential international treaty. U.S. approval of the Psychotropic Conven- tion would strengthen our hand in obtaining cooperation from other governments in con- trolling the classic narcotic substances. The approach to a successful antidrug pro- gram cannot, of course, relate to supply alone. Nor is an attack on the demand side alone the answer. Only through a combined effort can the job be done. Thus the initial objective of our international program has been to reduce availabilities of illicit supplies so that addicts will he driven into treatment and others will be deterred from experimen- tation. We are also examining ways to foster international cooperation in the fields of treatment and prevention to augment aware- ness that drug abuse is not exclusively an American problem but one that seriously af- fects developing countries just as it plagues the affluent. We also hope to demonstrate our progress in treatment and prevention and to learn from other countries the methods that they have found effective. As many of you know, we have several co- operative treatment and research projects with a number of concerned governments throughout the world. For example, with the Government of Mexico through Dr. Guido Belsasso's organization, the Mexican Center for Drug Dependency Research, we have pro- vided some assistance to the Mexican epide- miological study and we are jointly studying heroin use along our common border. I think we can point with pride to our role over the past three years toward a tightening of international controls. Worldwide seizures and arrests of traflickers have become more Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 and more significant as other countries have joined in the battle. And there has been a move in the direction of more effective con- trols through treaty obligations. However, the job is far from done. It should be ap- parent to its all that abundant supplies of narcotics-both in storage and under cultiva- tion-quickly respond to illicit high profits. Our task, then, is to further strengthen the international control mechanism to reduce illicit trafficking. On October 18, John Bartels, the Admin- istrator of DEA, Dr. Robert DuPont, Direc- tor of the Special Action Office for Drug Abuse Prevention, and I met with President Ford to review the U.S. drug abuse pro- grams. The President stated that he had per- sonally seen examples of the human devasta- tion caused by (lrug abuse and said he wanted every appropriate step taken to further the U.S. Government's drug abuse program both at home and abroad. On the international front, the President specifically directed that all American Ambassadors be made aware of the prime importance lie attaches to our ef- forts to reduce the flow of illicit drugs to the United States and requested that each Am- bassador review the activities of his mission in support of the drug program. Thus, drug control continues to he a high- priority foreign policy issue. In cooperation with our missions abroad and the govern- ments to which they are accredited, we shall carry on with our efforts against the scourge of drug abuse. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 NEW YORK TIMES 21 April 1975 Latins Now Leaders Of Hard-Drug Trade Operators of Rings Supplying U.S. Virtually Immune From Prosecution In the last two years, Latin America has become the major source of hard drugs entering the United States. Much of it is being supplied by rings con- trolled by businessmen and professionals who have grown so politically and economically powerful that they can operate with virtual immunity from ar- rest and prosecution. Latin America now supplies all of the cocaine sold in the United States, where the de- mand for the drug has risen so sharply that the price of coca leaves, from which co- caine is extracted, has soared 1,500 per cent since 1973 in some Latin countries - from $4 to $60 a bale. In addition, Mexico has now replaced France as the main supplier of heroin to the United States, increasing its share of the illegal heroin market from 20 to 60 per cent in the last five years. The increasing market for drugs from Latin America, which is centered in New York, Miami and Los Angeles, is sup- plied by traffickers who can buy protection by bribing poor- ly paid police officers, judges and other officials. In some cases, corrupt policemen and public officials in Latin Ameri- ca have gone into the profitable drug traffic themselves. New Networks Formed The shift of the drug flow from Europe to Latin America also has brought into power new criminal networks in New York and other cities in the United States that are dominat- ed by Colombians, Cubans and Mexicans. The Federal Drug Enforce- ment Administration has ident- By NICHOLAS GAGE litically that they are consid- ered "untouchable" in their na. The New York Times has conducted a two-month in- vestigation in eight Latin American countries to ex- plore how the drug traffic works there, how narcotics reach the main market in New York, who the major dealers are and what the United States and Latin American nations are doing about the problem. This is the first in a series of four articles and supplemental re- ports on that investigation. live countries. Some Latin American police- is kilos of cocaine in her posses- Typical of the situation men who won't take bribes sion, the judge on the case the case of Luis Rivadeneira are not averse to arresting drug dismissed the charges against of Ecuador, who was arrested traffickers and then extorting her. But the Minister of the there last Dec. 16 with two money from them-a practice Interior, Juan Pereda Asb0n, kilos (4.4 pounds) of cocaine called volteo, which means had both Miss Malky, whose possession. Soon rolling." family he knew, and the judge paste in his Last year a United States jailed on corruption charges. after his arrest, according to citizen was arrested trying to Several factors have put authorities, Adm..Alfredo Pove- buy two kilos of cocaine for Latin America on the crest of da Burbano, Ecuador's Minister $7,000 from Maj. Oscar Zebal- the wave of profitable drug of Government, who directs all los of a Bolivian narcotics unit traffic. law-enforcement agencies in who was posing as a trafficker. In recent years cocaine has Major Zeballos seized the mon- become the most fashionable the country, called the police ey, keeping $5,000 for himself drug in the United States and and ordered them to change and letting two younger offi- Europe because it is less expen- the evidence against Mr. Ri- cers split the rest. sive than heroin, it Is not physi- vadeneira so that the charges His mistake was not sharing cally addictive and it has a against him would have to be the money with the informant reputation as a sexual stimu- dismissed. who had originally put him lant. One indication of the on to the North American. The drug's growing popularity is "Admiral Poveda explained irate informant told the officer's that cocaine seizures in the his order by saying that Ri- superiors and Major Zeballos United States have increased vadeneira was a close relative was quietly dismissed from the 700 per cent since 1969. of a friend of his-another ad- police force, losing all his ben- The huge profits to be miral," said a police captain. efits. made by transporting co- The police complied. The astronomical profits of caine from Latin America to If drug so tempting to some underpaid why so many are willing to political influence to stop in- Latin American policemen that take the risk. In New York vestigations against them, they they go into the business them- City a kilo of cocaine is sold can often successfully bribe selves. on the street for between $75,- police officers or judges. Last year, for example, a 000 and $100,000. In La Paz, Traffickers have so much DC-3 flying from Peru to Co- Bolivia, that same kilo would lombia had mechanical trouble cost only $4,000; in Lima, Peru, available cash, for example, and was forced to land on a $5,000; in Quito, Ecuador, that in Colombia judges some- military base in Colombia. There $6,000; in Bogota, Colombia, times compete to try major were five people inside. The $7,500, and in Buenos Aires, narcotics cases because of the head of the group identified $8,500. (North American cus- potential payoffs involved. himself as Lieut. Benhur Bena- tomers are charged 15 to 30 Eduardo Davila, reputed to vides of the Colombian nar- per cent above these going be a major cocaine trafficker cotics unit of F-2-the detective rates.) from the city of Santa Marta, division of the national police. French Source Weakened was arrested late last year on Nevertheless, the commander of charges of murdering a police- the military compound had the While cocaine has been man. According to the Colour- plane searched and inside he growing in price and populari- bian national police, three found 100 kilograms of cocaine ty, heroin from France-the judges have already tried to get paste. traditional source-has been his case. declining in availability be- Traffickers often find the po- Resisting Easy Money cause of international law-en- lic^_ even easier to corrupt than Despite the temptations, forcement pressure on French iudges because throughout Lat- many policemen remain honest. traffickers. This has left a gap in America they are so badly "I've met cops making $60 a that is increasingly being filled paid. Police salaries range from month who wouldn't take a by Mexican heroin. about $60 a month in Bolivia nickel from anybody," said Mexico began producing her- to $250 a month in Argentina. Louis Bachrach, the Druf En- oin for the United States in Mexico, some high police forcement Administrations re- market during World War 11. gional director for South "When the war dried up the officials are known to have ified about 250 Latin Americans become millionaires by taking America. supply of heroin from Europe, as controlling the rings that bribes. When some police offi- Many government officials several New York Mafiosi- supply cocaine and heroin to cers are transferred from one also are unmoved by any per- Tom Gagliano, Frank Livorsi, the United States market. Some district to another, they sell sonal or political considera- Joe Bonanno-went to Mexico to their successors the list of tions. When the Bolivian police and set up a new source of of them are so i uential po a NOM , %&, Went s I ' said John T. Cusack, approved For a, /O2d: CIAa 1 4 01;0040~f( t~ a Drug Enforcement Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 Administration's international operations. "Until then only a few Chinese immigrants were growing poppies in Mexico." Today the Federal authorities estimate that Mexico produces 15 tons of opium base, from which heroin is made, every year. It comes from thousands of cultivation sites situated principally in the states of Sinaloa, Durango, Sonora and Guerrero. The heroin refined from Mexican poppies is brown in color while French heroin, refined by more sophisticated methods, is white. Mexico is now employing soldiers to seek out and destroy fields of opium poppies. "So far this year we have destroyed 6,000 poppy fields and have de- tected another 2,000," said Pedro Ojeda-Paullada, Mexico's Attorney General, who is di- recting the eradication pro- gram. But so far the drive has not slowed up poppy cultivation to any noticeable degree. When one field is destroyed, the campesinos (peasant farmers) plant again elsewhere. Last year Mexico passed a law that provided for confisca- tion of land used for cultivating opium poppies. But the campe- sinos worked around that by planting the poppies on Federal lands-often on mountainsides that are too steep for army helicopters to land on and hard to reach on foot. 'Like the Old West' In Mexico, the investigation of narcotics traffickers is just one of many responsibilities of a 340-man Federal police force. The Federales are led by 20 comandantes and enforcement apparently depends largely on the competence of individual commanders. "It's like the Old West," said Robert Eyman, the Drug En- forcement Administration's re- gional director in :Mexico. "if you have a strong Marshal Dillon, you get good enforce- ment." United States officials esti- mate that there are four Mar? shal Dillons among the 20 co. mandantes. Some of the others are said to be simply indiffer- ent, but several are thou ht blatantly corrupt, having be- come millionaires on a job that pays about 5300 a month. To combat such problems, Mr. Ojeda-Paullada uses select- ed comandantes, such as Salva- dor Del Toro and Ismael Diaz Laredo, to carry out special missions. He also periodically shifts comandantes from one post to another to keep them from establishing ties with traf- fickers. Nevertheless, many traffick- ers retain their power, pro- tected not only by the po- Among the 70 major drug traf- fickers United States agents have chosen as primary targets in Mexico, is a high official in a major ministry. Attorney General Ojeda-Paul- lada has tried to fight such corruption by dismissing or reassigning corrupt officials in several provinces, promoting mandatory sentences for major drug traffickers and setting up a school to provide professional standards for the Federal po- lice. But thus far the Mexican Government's efforts have not been enough to inhibit heroin production in Mexico. Nor have they succeeded in discouraging Uie use of the country as a transshipment point for co- caine from South America. Crop From Andes Cocaine is derived from the leaves of the coca plant, which grows at elevations of 2,000 to 8,000 feet on the eastern slopes of the Andes mountains. Because of the large quantity of leaves required to produce cocaine-more than 300 pounds for one kilo-the leaves are processed by campesinos into "coca paste" in primitive stills close to the growing areas. These stills are no more than oil drums containing a solution of potassium carbonate, water and kerosene in which the leaves are allowed to soak. The paste, which resembles moist flour, is then shipped to laboratories throughout Lat- in America to be processed into cocaine, Processing co- caine does not require the so- phisticated chemistry needed to produce heroin. A cocaine lab- oratory can be set up with about $1,500 worth of equip- ment. Peru and Bolivia are the only two Latin American countries where the cultivation of coca leaves is legal. In Peru, new coca planting has been forbid- den since 1964, but production of coca has increased 20 per cent a year. Last year Peru produced 20 million kilograms of coca leaf, only 4 million of which were used for such legitimate purposes as export for chemical use and for chew- ing by local Indans. When the Peruvian Govern- ment clears jungle land for farming and turns it over to the campesnos, they almost always plant coca on the land. The Government winks at this practice, however, because it allows the campesinos, who are mostly Indians, to support themselves without any train- ing or financial support. "The Peruvian Government Crop Test in Bolivia Unlike Peru, Bolivia has been trying harder to bring coca production under control. Bo- livia is now participating in an $800,000 United States pilot project -to find crops that the campesinos would be willing to grow instead of coca. Many observers are doubtful about the project's chances of suc- cess, however, pointing out that coca requires little atten- tion and provides three to four harvests a year, attributes that few other crops can offer. "I've got as much skepticism about the project as anyone," said William Stedman, the United States Ambassador to Bolivia. "But we've never tried crop substitution down here and an experimental effort should be made." A year ago Bolivia enacted broad narcotics legislation call- ing for the control of coca production, stiff prison terms for drug dealers and unified police action against major traffickers. But implementation of the law has been extremely slow and the narcotics unit has made few significant ar- rests or seizures, Col. Luis Carrasco, director of the Department of Narcotics, has attributed the lack of prog- ress to organizational prob- lems. "We want to set up an effec- tive unit and find honest, able men for it," he said. "This takes time." But other officials wonder whether the lack of progress is not related to the political influence that some major traf- 'ickers are said to have in Bolivia. For example, when Alberto Sanchez Bello, a courier for one of Bolivia's major cocaine traffickers, Carlos Balderama, needed diplomatic papers to facilitate carrying a cocaine shipment to Canada last year, he was able to go to Edwin Tapia Frontanilla, secretary to the presidency. Mr. Sanchez was arrested in Canada and Mr. Tapia's role in the affair was exposed, forcing his dis- missal from office. The centers of the narcotics traffic in Bolivia are La Paz, the capital, sprawling across the slopes of a canyon 12,000 feet above sea level, and Santa Cruz, the country's commercial center on the eastern lowlands. Bolivian traffickers process coca paste, which they buy So much coca paste is sent from Santa Crtiz to northern Paraguay and western Brazil that the area is called "the Silver Triangle" to compare it to the center of opium traffic in Laos, Cambodia and Thai- land known a$ "the Golden Triangle." Until 1973, otivia exported most of its coca paste to Chile. "Chile has always had the best cocaine chemi is in South America," said cot. Guido L6- pez of the Bo ivian national police. "It wa the Chileans in fact who first taught the Bolivian campe~inos how to make paste fro coca leaves." Junta Cranks Down But the milit~ry junta that seized power in Chile in 1973 has acted against major traf- fickers, jailing hem, expelling them to the Ur ited States or forcing many o them to flee the country. M y dealers went to northern Argentina, where they are now setting up new laboratories. But they are mov- ing cautiously because they have alien statuand therefore are subject to expulsion. Those remaining in Chile operate mostly around the northern city of Arica, which is near the bo ders of both Bolivia and Peru. The traffick- ers in Arica apparently still are entrenched enough to com- mand police protection. "When we have a case in Arica, we never tell the police what we're up ti," said a lieu- tenant in the Carabineros in Santiago. "We've been burned too many times."I Peru, the other coca-produc- ing country in 1 atin America, exports most of its coca paste to its northern neighbors, Ecua- dor and Colombia. In Ecuador the; major cocaine rings operate out of Quito, the capital, and Guayaquil, the principal port. Ecuadorian traf- fickers now send more than 100 kilograms f cocaine a month to the nited States, according to Walter White, head of Drug Enforcement Ad- ministration's office in Quito. A Faltering Effort The police in Ecuador have not been considered effective against the dryg traffickers. As is customary throughout the country's various; police forces, officers in the are transferred t every four mon are never on the j b long enough to learn how t make major drug cases. A reorganization law for the police was drafted more than a year ago that established two-year tours o~ duty for nar- cotics work, But the law keeps Lima. "Many ministers feel that a kilo, at a handsome profit. bouncing from ministry to min- cocaine is an American problem They also export it at $1,000 istry d without being imple- arcotics unit other duties hs and they Some and not a Peruvian responsibili- a kilo to laboratory operators mente . a arepubl c oodficia lers, ino~f~a t F&r Release 1999/09/02 : ~i eA q~t~~9p~a ~4/ai~1010n nimajor dealers are dfia ! `~ n Eduador, they often Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 are able to avota prosecution. "If a trafficker is a land- owner or a lawyer or an important man, many judges will dismiss the charges against him no matter what the evidence," said Col. Tarquino Ntitiez, director general of nar- cotics enforcement in Ecuador. "A professor was caught with three kilos of coca paste last September and the judge re- leased him only because of his position." Ecuador not only prccesses cocaine, it also produces opium poppies. Acres of poppies are planted every year in remote mountain fields, usually mixed with other crops such as corn or barley. "Heroin is not a serious prob- lem in Ecuador now, but the potential is here," Mr. White said. His immediate concern, he said, is to persuade Ecuadorians to strengthen controls along their borders with Peru and Colombia. "Tons of paste come up from Peru with little interference and a lot of it moves on up to Co- lombia," he said. "if we could do something about the bor- ders, we would disrupt the co- caine traffic not only here, but also in Colombia, which sends more of the stuff to the United States than any country in South America." Federal authorities believe Colombia now has between 60 and 80 major criminal organi- zations engaged in the cocaine traffic. "Half of them are as NEW YORK TIMES 21 April 1975 sophisticated and as disciplined as our own Mafia families," said Octavio Gonzalez, head of the Drug Enforcement Ad- ministration s office in Bogota. "They have ample capital re- sources, large organizations of from 50 to 100 people and layers of authority that effec- tively insulate their leaders from prosecution." These groups are based in Colombia's major cities-Me- dellfn, the industrial capital; Bogota, Cali, Barranquilla, San- ta Maria and Cartagena. They employ their own chemists to process cocaine in sophisticated laboratories outside the main cities, own fleets of planes, trucks and automobiles, and can call on scores of couriers to transport their product. Colombian drug rings send at least 300 kilograms of co- caine a month to the United States, mostly to New York and Miami, according to Feder- al law-enforcement agency esti- mates. Like many Latin-American countries, Colombia has several police forces fighting the nar- cotics trade-the security police; F-2, the detective branch of the national police; and the customs police. The F-2 narco- tics unit is considered to be the most effective. But police action alone, no matter how intensive, cannot destroy the narcotics traffic in Latin America. "There are too many loopholes in our laws and not enough cooperation between countries," said Capt. Theodoro Campo Gdmt'z, the 31-year-old commander of the F-2 narcotics unit in Colombia. "We have to change." Atlantic Ocean 0 Mites 1000 Th0 New York Times/April 21, 1975 So much one ,..,-aste, which is processed into cocaine, is snipped from Santa Cruz, Bolivia, to northern Para- guay and western Brazil that the area is called "The Silver Triangle," to compare it to the center of opium traffic in Southeast Asia called "The Golden Triangle." American countries that will Alvarez, the coca paste is Herreras Among Biggest zens. extradite its own citi- refined into cocaine. These ens. Later, however, he made laboratories are usually with- the mistake of visiting Peru. in 10 to 15 miles of Colom- At the request of United bia's main cities - Bogota, Of Cocaine Organizations States officials there he was Medellin, Cali and Barran- arrested and expelled to the quilla. United States. He is now Last Dec. 16 the Colombian One of the biggest rings Outsiders chosen for their back in prison in Atlanta. police raided a laboratory supplying the New York mar- professional skills bring the In Benjamin's absence, canoe to supplying co- ket with cocaine is the Her- organization's membership to leadership of the family has aine to the Herrera le - o rera organi, ation of Colom? a total of 92. been taken over by his broth- zation that was capable of bia, which has its headquar- er Gustavo, according to the turning out 50 kilos of co- ters in Cali, the flourishing A Daring Escape Colombian police. Ramiro, caine in one batch. Of the city southwest of Bogot4. United States and Colom- another brother, is in charge eight persons arrested, one "The Herreras send out than authorities say the nom- of importing coca paste from was a professor of chemistry an average of 40 kilograms final head of the organization Bolivia, Peru and Ecuador. at Santiago University in Cali of cocaine a month, mostly is 34-year-old Benjamin (Ne- Informants say the paste and another was a captain to New York and Miami," gro) Herrera. They say it is often flown to the interna- in the Cali fire brigade. The says Octavio Gonzilez, head is indicative of the organiza- tional airports at Cali and police also found a 25-ton of the Federal Drug Enforce- tion's power that the Herre- Bogota in ordinary suitcases press used for packing the men( Administration office rat arranged for Benjamin's and rushed through customs cocaine into fine sheets, 700 in Bogota. "At wholesale successful escape from the without inspection by accom- gallons of acetone used in the prices that adds up to a $14- Federal penitentiary in Atlan- modating officials on the or- chemical process and other million a year business." ta, where he had been sen- ganization's payroll. equipment and materials val- tenced to five years in 1970 ued at $800,000. Like most Latin-American Authorities say the Herre- ElaborateCourier S criminal groups dealing in for to ing to smuggle heroin ras have several well- yam drugs, the Herrera organiza- into the United States. equipped laboratories in Co- Although the Herreras may tion has a family as its nu- After his escape. {B~enjja~jm~ Benjamin lombia where, yunder the su- lose a lab once in a while, ards. clews-seven bA*AQM FOr t~etR~Nrane n~lti~f/Bt Ji Cl~ id 14~t li~c 01004 D$I er' erastllabora oriies sisters, cousins Caribbean Sea PANi4M j6ar9ca9_ _ .... Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 process the paste, the fin- ished cocaine is distributed to Emilio Herrera in Barran- quilla, Carlos Herrera in Bo- gota and David Herrera in Medellin. They, in turn, ex- port it by "mules" (couriers) in small amounts of two to four kilograms each. Larger quantities are sent on com- mercial vessels through the ports of Turbo and Bue- naventura to Atlantic coast harbors in the United States. Couriers for the Herreras sometimes pose as students. They are given student visas and they are supplied with hooks that have sheets of cocaine secreted in them. The "students" are paid from $500 to $1,000 plus expenses and are given new clothes for carrying the cocaine to New York. The authorities say false documents for these couriers are usually procured by Aura Monsalve, a cousin of the Herreras, and Francisco Mar- tinez, who also serves as a liaison to several of the group's North American buy- ers. It is unlikely that an organ- ization as large as the Her- rerases could function with- out police and political protection. Authorities say the organization's protectors include not only influential officials in the police, cus- toms and the judiciary, but also several leading members of Colombian society who have invested in the lucrative cocaine trade. NEW YORK TIMES 22 April 1975 Drug-Smuggling Logistics Bizarre and Often Fatal Second of four articles on why Latin America is now the major source of hard drugs entering the United States. The rainy season has ended in Chulumani, Bolivia, and on the steeply terraced mountainside, Juan Mamani is crouching in his small plot of coca plants, beginning to strip the tiny green leaves that will be his first crop of the year. He will pack the leaves into bales, called tambors, and sell the 300 pounds he harvests for $250. In Jackson Heights, Queens, drug dealers are waiting for new supplies of co- caine from South America. The 300 pounds from Juan Mamani's small plot will pro- duce one kilogram of the drug (2.2 pounds). Although he will get $250 for his crop, the kilo of cocaine will bring in at least $75,000 in the New York City retail market. The huge profit between New York and Latin Ameri- ca, which has become the major source of hard drugs entering the United States, is what makes thousands of men and women willing to take the risks involved in smuggling cocaine into the United States. The methods they use are imaginative, bizarre and sometimes fatal to the cour- iers, who have been known to soak their clothes in co- caine or to swallow drugs stuffed in a prophylactic pouch. Everv conceivable contain- er has been used by couriers to secrete drugs coming in from Latin America -false- bottomed wine bottles, frames of paintings, hollow ski poles. Carmen Moreno, a member of the Alberto Bravo organization in Colom- bia, one of the leading nar- cotics rings, was captured when she was about to flv from Toronto to New York with a kilo of cocaine hidden in a hollow wooden hanger. Large quantities of cocaine -over four kilograms-are carry narcotics on their ves- sels into American ports. The drugs then may be carried ashore or dropped overboard in harbors to be picked up by scuba divers. In Colombia, major drug organizations often use pri- vate planes flown by their own pilots. A pilot will rent a plane in the United States and f:11 out a false flight plan. Then he will flv to Colombia, where the drugs are waiting. In northeast Colombia there is a desert area called Guajira that is so flat that planes can land just about anywhere," said Octavio Gonzalez, head of the Federal Drug Enforcement Adminis- tration office in Bogota. The area is controlled by Indians and there is little local law enforcement. "When they have a ship- ment, Colombian traffickers will pick a time and place for the landing and hire In- dians to guard the area. There will be 20 to 50 Indians armed with R-15 carbines. The plane lands, picks up the cargo, and takes off with- in 45 minutes." Large shipments of drugs- usually cocaine and marijua- na-can be moved on these flights, according to Mr. Gon- zalez. "Some of these planes are big: B-26's, B-25's twin- engine Cessnas and, in one instance, a Lockheed Con- stellation. And then the planes return to the states and land at designated small airports, sometimes in South Carolina, Florida and Geor- gia." According to the Drug En- forcement Administration, the Colombian narcotics or- ganizations have highly so- phisticated logistical equip- ment to assist these flights, including fuel depots and elaborate ground-to-air com- munications equipment. If one of their planes does get into trouble or if the pilot discovers that authorities are tracking it, the standard pro- cedure is to throw the drugs overboard. Smaller amounts of cocaine the couriers coroI a from Co- lombia, which sends more cocaine to the United States than any other Latin-Amer- ican country. Of Ithe 165 co- caine couriers arrested in the United States du ing the sec- ond half of last year, 117 were Colombiansi. Latin-American drug traf- fickers find it isn't difficult to recruit their 'countrymen as couriers, called "mules," because if they !are caught, many judges in the United States will give; them only suspended senterjces and de- port them in tho belief that they are not har(lened crimi- nals. "When the couriers go back home, there walking advertisements or the re- cruiters," said J hn R. Bar- tels Jr., the head',of the Drug Enforcement Ad inistration. Fees AreIigh Couriers, who sually earn from $500 to $1,000 a kilo plus expenses for each trip, have used many methods to conceal drugs. One of the most ingenious is to soak their cotton clothing in a liquid solution t Hat contains cocaine and on their arrival in the United States to put the clothes in a solution that releases the drug. Detection is difficult. "They start with cocaine base (the stage before pure cocaine) that they dissolve ip pure alcohol,'I' explained Eugene Castillo, fi Drug En- forcement Administration agent stationed in Bolivia. "Then they take an article of clothing, soap it in the solution and let it dry." "When they get to the States they take the article, soak it in acetone for 10 to 15 minutes, wring it out, and run the solution through filter paper. Then they pour the solution into s flat con- tainer and let itl dry. This process not only conceals the drug, it also refines the cocaine base into finished of base they soa they get 100 gr 300 grams this way, ms of co- usually sent by ship or plane. -under four kilos-are car- Caine." Crew members on ships are vied generally by couri6n, Another one of the more m"d Approved Fn u aatJl9'/02 : yd'P-y~ttt00010~s4the! most tdan~ lactic gerous: couriers fill h For o L~rtit 'off' ic s. ?ro h rotor 'from 0 ",CO. lactic APP ro 9,J' 9r't1 J0 : CD looa oa and then swallow it before and $1,500. Those who are apprehend- Latin America, according to ed carrying narcotics in Mex- crossing the border. They in- The retailers who buy the Federal agents. Mexican her- ico, however, run the risk tend to regurgitate the ounce then cut the cocaine oin in New York has sur- of serving at least five years pouches later. But in at least three or four times and sell faced primarily in Greenwich in a Mexican prison. four instances, United States the diluted Cocaine for $50 a Village, where it is said to citizens who went to Latin gram. Their gross for one be running 17 per cent pure As of last February, there America to buy drugs, swal- ounce thus ranges between compared to about seven per were 509 United States citi- lowed the pouches and then $4,200 and $5,600. cent for French heroin. zens in Mexican jails, 420 were stricken when their di- Arrests of Latin traffick- But outside New York, Fed- of them there on narcotics gestive juices caused the ers in New York has dis- eral agents say Mexican her- charges. Of these 420, some pouches to burst. closed that many of them had oin dominates the market, 123 were women. Three men-in Bolivia, Co- entered the United States on taking an 80 per cent share Conversations with some lombia and Panama-died as forged passports and that in Chicago, a 70 per cent of them in a Mexican prison a result of this method of most of them had police rec- share in Houston, a 60 per showed that they generally smuggling. A partner of the ords back home as petty cent share in Los Angeles believed they would soon be man in Bolivia also was thieves. and a 50 per cent share deported by the Mexican stricken and went into con- The rings that handle co- in Denver. government in response to vulsions, but his life was Caine distribution in the city Los Angeles is the source pressure from the United saved. include scores of members, city for most of the Mexican States Government. Key City Areas Cited Last October, for example, heroin sold in the United "They seem to be convinced Federal agents and the New States, according to Abraham that they'll be allowed to When the cocaine reaches York police arrested 150 per- L. Azzam, the Drug Enforce- go home if they just push the New York metropolitan sons that they said were part ment Administration's deputy their Congressmen a little area, it goes to major distri- of just one ring, the Alberto regional director in Califor- harder," said Peter J. Peter- bution rings centered in areas Bravo organization. nia. Dealers from other cities son, the United States Consul with large Latin populations, The Bravo sroun ' .a,; said go to Los Angeles to pick up General in Mexico City. "The such as Jackson Heights in y to have imported ^,00 pounds their supplies from whole- often fabricate complaints Queens, the South Bronx, of cocaine in 1974 alone. salers there who deal directly and it makes it difficult for Washington Heights and Important figures in il,e us to handle legitimate Union City, N. J., according , group, according to narcotics with Mexican traffickers, he grievances." to Arthur Grubert, head of agents, included Mario Rodri- said. Asked about the Americans the Drug Enforcement Ad- guez of Forest Hills, Queens, Unlike the French heroin in prison, Pedro rney en- ministration's intelligence in whose apartment the traffickers, who prefer to po liada, Mexico's Attorney Gen- unit in New York. "Union lice said the found nine send drugs in big lots, the they eral, said, "I can tell you City is known as Cocaine p categorically of cocaine, and Do- Mexican suppliers use the cate gorically that Mexico City in some quarters," he min o Fernandez of Jackson "human wave" approach. g will not deport anyone until said. Heights, now a fugitive. They send a multitude of he completes his sentence. The growth of the cocaine But, the organization's couriers carrying small are totally committed market in New York has leader, Alberto Bravo, re- amounts on the theory that to the law and any person created important rings to mains at large in Medellin, if some are apprehended, the bringing drugs into Mexico majority will get through. supply it. These rings are Colombia. His chief lieuten- "The biggest five to 15 years in dominated by Colombians ant in charge of maintaining seizure of our prisons." and Cubans, Mr. Grubert French heroin we ever had Although most of the oth- said. smuggling operations to New was 412 kilos," said John T. er Latin-American countries Many of the rings are York, Bernardo Roldan, also Cusack, head of international have equally stiff drug laws, closely bound through family remains free in Medellin. They operations for the Drug En- recruiters of "mules" in the loserelationships, and disputes have been indicted in New forcement Administration. York on conspiracy "But our biggest States assure them are settled b dis- P charges, seizure of generally by but Eolombi., will not extra- Mexican heroin was only the Latin-American used cussion, he said. Violence is dite its citizens to the United eight kilos." Y la countries Ts don't enforce those used to maintain discipline, laws. The fact is, only Co- he said, but not as often as States. If a Mexican drug traf. lombia consistently deports in Mafia groups. To keep its vast New York ficker wants to send a heroin North American drug viola- "Latin criminal network adequately supplied, shipment of more than three groups authorities say the Bravo or- kilos to the United States, he a tors and it holds them about maintain much closer ties ganization shipped cocaine will usually have it driven a year first. to the main organizations Latin-American dru traf- back home than American to it through a variety of across the border in a special g routes, including Canada, "load" car or flown over in a Sicilian "mules like to recruit Mafia groups do with their Mexico, Puerto Rico and Mi- private airplane. ' mules" from among the counterparts," Mr. ami. One shipment was first , most innocent and honest-ap. Grubert said. At checkpoints on the Mex- pearing united States res. flown Mafia groups in New York to Munich and then -ican border, United States have not become active in to New York, where it was Customs agents use corn- idents they can find. the cocaine traffic, Federal said to have been delivered puters into which they feed Two grandmothers fro-4 officials believe, because to Mario Rodriguez. the license number of any California, Jeanne McMi.a they do not have well-estab- The authorities contend that suspicious car that passes chael, 61 years old, and Eliz. fished relations with sup- New York distributors for through. If any information abeth Lankton, 52, were in. pliers in South America. South American traffickers is recorded about the car, it trigued when they were apy- New York cocaine dealers are not restricted to Latins. scores a "hit" on the com- proached by a woman they are doing a booming busi For years, one of the biggest puler and is pulled aside and knew who offered them free ness, which has not been drug traffickers in Bolivia, searched. vacations to South America affected by the economic re- Jaime Hergueta, sent almost plus $6,000 each for bringing cession since many of their all of the cocaine he Drug traffickers will often back cocaine. customers are from affluent processed to James A. Aus- send an empty car across the The two grandmother) circles where snoetin co- tin, who operated out of border to see if it scores a successfully carried cocain, g Manhattan and the Bronx, "hit." If it is passed through, back from Colombia and Boa 1 aine has become increasing- according to narcotics offi- they will bring it back and Livia. But on March 24, 1974. y popular. cials here. load it up with heroin. they were arrested going Mr. Austin, who the police Border Vigilance Difficult through customs in Mexico When the New York rings say accumulated four apart- Because the border he- City and subsequently con- receive the cocaine, they sell ments, three Mercedes Benz tween Mexico and the United victed of carrying six kilo. it to wholesalers in kilo lots, automobiles and a 67-font States is both big (2,000 grams of cocaine in false-bot- and they, in turn, market yacht during his alleged asso- miles) and busy (25 million tomed suitcases. it in ounce portions. Mr. ciation with Mr. Hergueta, crossings last year) it is vir- The women have been in Grubert said that their was arrested on narcotics tually impossible to police it custody tor more tnan a year "stores" are often Latin bars charges last Dec. 16 at Ken- thoroughly. This has tempted now, but they have not been and restaurants throughout nedy Airport as he stepped some United States residents sentenced yet. Because of the city. f -from q~~ {~ drug laws is An ounce of 1 13ptj eyed Fo ; . I~~rrbo2 CJ a i%nll`tr tb1 4 OO1 >'$ U?'-'1re certain to cocaine (more than 95 per New York gets all of its it to the United States spend at least five years in a Mexican jail. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 No Antiwoman job 1 Bias In the Narcotics Trade a~~Us Illicit CocaineTraffic M Growers ;I Processorsand Exporters 4' Shippers husbands' rackets. Latin wo- men often work closely with their men in; the narcotics traffic. When! two brothers, Juan and Roberto Hernandez, were imprisoned in Mexico for drug smuggling in 1970, their wives r~ontinued their work. On Oct. 17,4974, the Mexi- can federal police investi- gated their a tivities in the La Mesa State Penitentiary in Tijuana an discovered evidence showing that the Hernandezeshad continued to run their drug ring even behind bars.' Also busy in the traffic from her cell was Roberto's wife Helen, who had been apprehended ear- lier. A month !later, Mexican authorities *rrested Juan's wife Patrici in a Tijuana motel as she; was delivering a kilo of heroin to a customer from the United States. They found in her possession fami- ly records documenting ex- tensive real estate holdings and a balange in Hernandez bank accounts of about $20- million. She; also was con- victed. But the r sks for women in the narcotics trade are not always confined to law- enforcement;agents. Consider the harsh fate of Ruth Goda- mez of Chile. who was a dealer in cocaine with her lover, Selim Valenzada. Unit- ed States arcotics agents had made iss Godamez a major targe4 and placed her under suvetll,ance. Mr. Valerizada saw Miss Godamez speaking to someone wlltom he thought was a narcotics agent and decided thatl she had become an informer}.. He shot her five times in the stomach, but she surn~ived the wounds. Later MrI Valenzada was expelled fr m Chile to the United Stags, where he had been under; indictment on a narcotics c arge. As he was led to det~ntion, he asked narcotics agents, "Was she talking or did I waste the bullets?" No one answered his question. Miss G damez did not ''turn"-be;ome an inform- ant - but after several o Il ruled that since her . NEZUEIA \!~/ FRENCH \ es 1 0 Women have a prominent place in Latin America's illic- it drug traffic, filling every role from "mule" (courier) to head of a criminal organiza- tion. A short, stocky, middle- aged woman of Chilean de- scent who owns three wig shops in Buenos Aires is con- sidered by American officials to be one of the major sources of narcotics brought into the United States. Yolanda Sarmiento, who is 46 years old, has a long history of narcotics involve- ment. "She's one of the sharpest dealers anywhere," said Rhyn C. Tryal, head of the Federal Drug Enforcement Administration's office in Buenos Aires. On April 15, 1970, the New York police raided a West Side apartment alleged- ly used by Mrs. Sarmiento and seized 72 kilograms of heroin and 47 kilograms of cocaine with a wholesale value of $3.5-million. A few days later, the po- lice arrested Mrs. Sarmiento along with her lover Emilio Diaz Gonzalez, who is a na- tive of Spain, and two other men outside a New Jersey motel. Federal agents say they were traveling by car from Miami to claim the nar- cotics that had been stashed in the apartment. Escapes City Jail Mrs. Sarmiento's hail was set at $100,000. She posted the bail and then fled the United States, leaving Mr. Dfaz and his associates in custody in New York. Several months later, on Jan. 24, 1971, Mr. Diaz es- caped from the Federal House of Detention in Man- hattan. Investigators in New York believe that Mrs. Sar- miento had helped plan and finance his escape. The pair were next seen in Buenos Aires where Mr. Dfaz was seriously wounded in a gunfight with the Argen- tine police on Dec. 2, 1972. He escaped and his wherea- bouts are unknown, but Mrs. Sarmiento was apprehended. The United States tried to have her expelled from Ar- gentina to New York to stand trial. But the Argentine The New York Times/April 22, 197S cm karen were uurn ur n, gcu- has decided to cooperate Map indicates where illicit cocaine originates and moves in Latin Amerce. tins, Mrs. Sarmiento was en- with the government. -- - Appro elease-4999/0S 0 CtA=RD1 -b19'94 tIbc1i 48400001-1 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 NEW YORK TIMES 23 April 1975 and Francois Chiappe, prac- Two other informants subse- Argentine Filled Key Role ticed giving one another shock quently said that Guillermo treatments to train themselves Gonzalez was closely linked to withstand torture if they with Armando Nicolai, and that In Latins' Drugs Network were seized and questioned by the association between them the police. Mr. Sarti himself dated back 10 years when Mr. was admiringly referred to by Gonzalez was an air controller his cronies as "Iron Head." in Panama and would clear Third of four articles on why Latin America is now; Informants say that Mr. Ni- planes for Mr. Nicolai that con- the major source of hard drugs entering the United ? States. i colai regarded these activities tained contraband. B NICHOLAS GAGE of the Pietra Forte with some As a result of this informa- y . i amusement. He considered him- tion, Mr. Nicolai was indicted The one man in South Amer- self merely a "businessman" in st of the leading principals, in New York for conspiracy ica whom drug enforcement i luding Mr. Ricord, were ex- the smuggling business and had in connection with the heroin officials say they would most led to the United States, no taste for robbing banks or Mr. Richard attempted to Y Y e they were convicted of exchanging shock treatments. smuggle into the United States. like to see behind bars is Ar- er As a contrabandista, Mr. Ni- rcotics violations and impris- Mr. Richard and Mr. Gonzalez mando H. Nicolai, a 46-year-old colai had accumulated' a large were convicted and sent to Argentine who has been under ed. Others fled to their na- number of contacts and also- t e Europe. Authorities say ciates throughout Latin Ameri- prison. indictment on narcotics con- t only major figure who man- A Prime Target spiracy charges in New York d to avoid their net was to ease who his we ae in a position passage across bor- After the Richard arrest, Mr. since 1971. ando Nicolai. ders and through customs. Nicolai became a prime target "Nicolai is the only man In Sarti and Mr. Nicolai Informants say that after he of United States narcotics down here with the reputation, t when the Corsican and got into the heroin trade he agents posted in South Ameri- contacts and know-how to reor- associates began courting used. the enormous amounts ca. When informants leaked n ive contrabandistas-South of money he was making to the information that something ganize tac the South American ericans who made a living extend his influence within the big was brewing in the Sarti- Connection," said Frank Mac- b smuggling various goods government, judiciary and the Nicolai group, United States olini, the Federal Drug En- a oss borders for the black police in half a dozen Latin- narcotics agents got permission forcement Administration's rket. American countries. from Uruguyan officials to put deputy regional director for 7r. Nicolai had already be- He moved his headquarters a tap on Mr. Nicolai's tele- South America. c ie a legend among the con- from Buenos Aires to Montevi- phone. Until 1972, 35 per cent of all t bandistas. Part of his fame deo, Uruguay, where he lived Iln early 1972, Lucien Sarti s due no doubt to his physi- In luxurious style, entertaining traveled. to La Paz, Bolivia, the French heroin smuggled c size and strength, for in influential politicians at his in the company of a - friend into the United States every a ountry where great height apartment near the presidential named lean-Paul Angeletti and year was sent through the iuncommon, Mr. Nicolai is palace and overseeing his fleet Housep Caramian, a Buenos Latin-American networks of jet 3 inches tall and weighs of automobiles and private Aires businessmafi who had European fugitives, most of over 230 pounds. planes, staffed by his own pbeen introduced to the heroin one instance, in 1962, lots. traffic a few years earlier. them French Corsicans. and a oup of asso- Informants maintain that Mr. Traveling with the men were At its peak, the French Con- es were arrested b the Mr Sarti s cotmmon-law wife section controlled much of the Y Po colai's contacts were so good and Mr. Aieletti's girlfriend. MrNicolai broke his that he would fly to France heroin supplfor 'the United cuffs with hs bare hands himself to pick up shipments All were usifalse identities. States, but it lost its hold on all beat tip seven policemen of heroin and carry them in Informants say the group its market except New York. le his cohorts escaped. "At- suitcases to South America ento Bolivia to buy a 6,000- Even in the city, the French that, every contrabandista say, he would be allowed acre plantation on which to irt~Argentina looked up to him," add, he would be allowed grow their own coca leaves traffickers fared poorly fora sa?t!'lthyn C. Tryal, the head of through customs without hav- so that they could branch out long spell, but authorities re- the Drug Enforcement Admin- ing his bags examined. into cocaine. They carried with port that French heroin is plen- istration's district office in them $380,000 in a case, which tiful on the streets again. [Page Buenos Aires. Mr. Nicolal was doing very they had with them when they well in the heroin-smuggling were arrested at their hotel. 53.1 Mr. Nicolai has an aristo- business when, on July 8, 1971, The lice had been called by The South American Connec- cratic appearance that hints of a young man from Panama tion, in its, powerful, days, was his Italian heritage. His strong named Rafael Richard, was ar- bered astute bellhop who remem- profile, with an arched nose, rested at John F. Kennedy Air- visit visit and who Sarti noticed from a previous composed primarily of two ma- suggests an ancient Roman port in New York after it was this trip he had registered on jor groups of Corsican traffick- bust, and his hair, worn fairly discovered that his suitcases gistered iut- ers. long, is dyed reddish brown. He contained 70 kilograms (154 der a different name. One organization, based in walks with a decided stoop. pounds) of heroin. Armando Nicolai's lawyer Buenos Aires, o Paraguay, was led by Auguste Mr. Nicolai was attracted by Mr. Richard had refused to Mario Conternz the hue profits to be made promptly turned up in La Paz Joseph Ricord, a 64-year-old R open his suitcases, maintaining and attempted without success naturalized Argentine citizen by smuggling hard drugs, and, that he had diplomatic immu- to obtain their release. Next thanks to his natural leadership nity because his father was to arrive, however, was Helena v*o served as an agent of ability, he soon rose to a posi- Panama's Ambassador to Tai- Ferreira. ? Gestapo in Fratsre during tion in the organization equal wan. But the inspector opened Miss Ferreira had flown to id War :'. The other was to that of Mr. Sarti. them anyway and when Mr. La Paz from her native Brazil, red by Lucien Sarti, the He did not, however, share Richard was taken into cus- where she had been living five murderer of a Belgian the almost fanatic Spartan dis- tody, he agreed to cooperate for a time with Mr. Sarti: Prliceman, who arrived in cipline of Mr. Sarti and his with the authorities. tending to be his sister, she S''uth America in 1966, when French Corsican associates, Mr. Richard said he had made persuaded the Bolivian officials some of whom formed a group five earlier smuggling trips to to release Mr. Sarti and all his was 29, to look into the nar- called the "Pietra Forte" (hard the United States and another associates except Mr. Cara- tics trade. Mr. Nicolai was an rock), a Mafia-like organization to Brazil and Argentina, most mian. But when they left La i portant member of the Sarti that specialized in extortion of them with his uncle, Guiller- Paz, informants say, they no anization. and bank robbery in addition mo Gonzalez, or in one case Innger had the $380,000 that Beginning in 1972, a barrage to heroin dealing. with his aunt, Nelva Jurado had been in their Mr. Macolini of the Federal possession extraditions, shootouts and drug agency said that the de Gonzalez. In Buenos Aires when they arrived. zures broke up the lucrative group, he said, his aunt gave speckk- The group traveled first to grou whose members includ- age to a man named Armando, Peru, where they were picked uth American pproved For Release 1999/09/011: CIAW [~1~~ rduPlt'~~Ub''100 0'061-1rt' pilot, Julio a vvrn "t ,vii, tratea at not neing awe to act not with them; she had been Sarti's companion, Jean-Paul against Mr. Nicolai that they ap- arrested in Peru and detained Angeletti. They expected anoth- proached United States agents an a currency charge. The ar- er shootout, but when they with an offer: If the United rest may have saved her life. entered the room Mr. Angeletti States consented, they would When Mr. Sarti arrived in was in bed with his mistress, have him killed. Mexico, he telephoned Asian- Georgette Viazzi, and his colt The offer was rejected. "We do Nicolai in Montevideo. The Cobra wa& out of: reach on. didn't want him that bad," said narcotics agents who were tap- the night table. '- the United States official to ping Mr. Nicolai's phone heard After the death of Lucien whom the offer was made. Mr. Sarti (whom they had not Sarti, all of his associates in Mr. Nicolai is now maintain- yet identified) tell him that he Mexico were deported. Mr. An- ing a very low profile in Buenos must come at once to Mexico geletti and Mr. ' Sarti:'s wife, Aires, conscientiously living the City. Mr. Sarti wanted him Lilia s` n Rou Viallet: were sent life of a middle-class merchant to meet with two Franco Corsi- back to France. Within the next in leather goods. He lives in a cans who were suppliers of several months me st of the modest apartment in Barrio heroin and some representa- European-born traffickers in. Once, the old Jewish section of tives from Mafia families in volved in the South American Buenos Aires, with his wife New York who were presuma- Connection were arrested or Angela and two sons, Er- ably to be the buyers. deported and the Sarti and nesto, 20, and Angel, 12. There was going to be a Ricord organizations had co!- According to Mr. Conterno, conference to set up future lapsed. an aristocratic, handsome, well- sales, Mr. Sarti indicated, as Armando Nicolai alone had spoken lawyer, reports of such well as to settle a deal for survived the purge, but shortly involvement in the heroin trade 70 kilograms of heroin that after, he faced a new threat. are "fantasies." He said that he had already on hand. The Drug Enforcement Admi- Mr. Nicolai has categorical'y "Nicolai made reservations nistration had organized "Oper- denied any involvement in the half a dozen times for Mexico, ation Springboard," which was drug charges against him in the but each time he held off," designed to persuade Latin United States. recalled Mr. Macolini, the American countries to expel to When it was pointed out that narcotics agent heading the in- the United States traffickers Rafael Richard and other con- vestigation of Mr. Nicolai. "He who were not natives of the victed drug traffickers have drove us crazy." country if they were under named Mr. Nicolai as the source Although he could not put indictment in the United States. of their drugs, Mr. Conterno his finger on what was wrong, Mr. Nicolai realized that he said, "When a man is facing 20 Mr. Nicolai apparently sensed was no longer safe in Uruguay years in jail and you give him that there was danger afoot and so he returned to his native a guitar and tell him that if he and he was reluctant to join Argentina. Authorities there say Mr. Sarti in Mexico City. It he made some efforts toward was just one example of Mr. reorganizing the drug traffic Nicolai's sixth sense for danger from Buenos Aires. But they that authorities say has made add that he knew he was a him the only survivor of the prime target of the police and South American Connection. that the knowledge evidently Lucien Sarti and his asso- was workin on t.;.. , g were all using anases? In February, 1973, during a The French Connection has during their stay in Mexico state of siege in Argentina be Post its hold on the heroin American cities, including be- City and in their telephone pre totaling 41]r2 kilos (908 fore Juan Perlin had returned to market in most of the coun- pounds). conversations with Mr. Nicolai. power, the police picked him tr, but it still dominates The eavesdropping narcotics up in a general round-up. The y in y' New York Back in uFranle, nder ithe poonal g say he general agents were desperately trying . acting under nternational so rattled that to find out their real identities, After a long dry spell, Fed- pressure, started convicting The Agents Move In officers, "I give u! Don't kill anal authorities here say major traffickers, identifying g up! that French heroin is plenti- laboratories an making bi The break came when, in me! the " ful again in the city, as dem- seizures of bot finished he course of a conversation Elements of the Argentine onstrated by the fact that roin being shipped out of with Mr. Nicolai, Mr. Sarti men- police were said to be so it's averaging close to seven the country an opium base tioned his own daughter's eager to get Mr. Nicolai per cent pure on the street, from Turkey being shipped name. Veronica, out of their country that they up from four per cent a into France to )e processed. The name was telegraphed arranged to hold him incommu. year ago. The law-enfoqcement pres- to Washington, where Jerry nicado until the Federal drug "It's a buyers' market sure was enhanced by Turk- Strickler was then heading the agents arranged for a plane to again," said John Fallon, the ey's decision in 1972 to pro- Federal drug agency's Latin come and take him to the Federal rug EMgrcement hibit further cultivation of was American known desk. Mr. Strickler United Stales. Administrtt torts regional di- poppies. for his computer- But once again Mr. Nicolai rector here. d All these fa tors forced like memory and soon he was second-guessed them U. h . a Until 1971 heroin processed French supplier to cut back able to identify Lucien Sarti made arrangements with his in France was flowing into sharply on th amount of simply from his daughter's first family and friends that he the United States at the rate heroin they sen to the Unit- name. would call them every couple of 10 tons a year and begs ed States. After repeated telephone calls of h If th A ;A t fi o him, they were to assume sold on the street were rim "They decided to concen- to Mr. Nicolai, saying that the from Frenchmen were now in Mexico he had been arrested. oing as much as 15 per cent trate on their drain market, City and waiting for him, Mr. Within two hours of his ar- pine. But in the next year the the East Coast from Rich- and Rave up and decided to rest, Mr. Nicolai's lawyer, Ma- lating uffering a reversals. series of devaa? to leave the the rest Mexicano ," the said John country meeting rio Conterno, had contacted without him. At that point the the police, saying that a writ T. Cusack, the ru Enforce- police decided to move against of habeas corpus was on its A Global Assault g the principals. way and demanding that his First the South American ment Anationt ation's chief On April 27, 1972, the Mexi. client be produced. toute, which was handling of international operations. can police approached Lucien Within four hours the writ $5 per cent of all French But the haral not French Sarti as he was getting into an arrived-not from a local court. heroin shipments to the Unit- enoughrs could not provide automobile with his wife and but from the Supreme narrowed heroin riven for their young daughter. Mr. Sarti, who of Argentina. V , was demolished narrowed market, and local The olice rea- - With the States, of the major probably realized he would be lized that they would never French wholesalers were forced to - Corsican traffickers identified as the fugitive under he able to spirit awn Mr. cut their supply so much Y in Latin America, sentence of death for killing a , that by 1973 w~qt was sold iceman in Bel pulled Nicolai to the United States. Then United States narcot- on the street Was as as only two out lMrQVQd For Q ' r~i~ . CIAi ~~gtyt? a~ '~tgr~q~p 1OO~14iO6OP1u4 out a Colt Cobr 1` r g ~} iWtlgd sTtindtgBtAZ+Ftfi~ fire. The police sho him dead. S3u thi time snma Argentine Unsatisfied with the heroin earlier, you'd be surprised how many arias he'll make up." He contended that the "per- secution" of Mr. Nicolai by United States agents is "a water-closet scandal. It's like Watergate and it;stinks." After Lucien Srti was shot in Mexico City, is pilot, Julio Lujdn was said to have flown, back to Uruguay with a cache of 90 kilos of heroin that Mr. Sarti had on hand. Mr. Luja.n Is now serving a prison term and Mr. Nicolai would like to think of a way to sell that heroin, the police aid. In addition, Mr Sarti is said to have hidden kilos of heroin in and Mr. Nicoiai find it. another 100 everal places is trying to Meanwhile, bo~h American and Latin American narcotics agents are eagerly trying t^ find something-anything-on which they can Nicolai in Argent lieve his freedor ccnvict Mr. na. They he- t constitutes the biggest threat that the South American; Connection might once agairi be revived. French Connection Stays Dominant in Market Here available, Mr. Cusack said, Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 NEW YORK TIMES many addicts here switched to methadone, .went into treatment centers or slowly detoxified themselves be- cause the heroin they were buying was increasingly di- luted. "As a result, the num- ber of heroin addicts on our streets declined considera- bly," he said. In the last year, however, authorities believe the French traffickers have reor- ganized and have found new ways,eof sending heroin here, One method, according to Federal agents, involves sending shipments to the Midwest, where they're less likely to be intercepted, ana having them forwarded East from there, The reorganization of the traffickers in France and the decrease in customers here have made heroin more avail- able again, authorities say, and that, in turn, has resulted in the higher purity of what is sold on the street. The degree of purity is seen as a measure of availability. Some narcotics specialists believe the increased availa- bility is due to the release of heroin stockpiles compiled by the traffickers three years ago when Turkey announced its ban on further cultivation of opium poppies. The traffickers stockpiled the heroin, the theory goes, in anticipation of soaring pri- ces once the ban was felt in the illegal drug market, and they released the stock. piles when Turkey an- nounced last year that it would resume cultivation of poppies. A New Worry Mr. Cusack and Arthur Grubert the chief of intel- ligence in the Drug Enforce- ment Administration's office in New York, do not believe that significant stockpiles ever existed. "If the French had that much heroin available, they would have broadened their market again, but they haven't," Mr: Cusack said. But officials of the Drug Enforcement Administration are very concerned that the French traffickers will start to do big business again once the poppy crops in Turkey are harvested. Mr. Cusack pointed out that Turkey first said it would al- low 70,000 farmers to culti- vate opium poppies, but it has now quietly increased that number to 103,000. "if each farmer holds back just one kilo for the illegal drug market, that's 100 tons of opium," he said. "That can bury us." 24 April 1975 Lack of Treaties Hinders U. S. Effort to Curb Drugs Last of four articles on why Latin America is now; the major 'source of hard drugs entering the United States. By NICHOLAS GAGE The United States has indict- ed more than half df the 200 active drug traffickers in Co- lcmbia for narcotics violations in this country, but under ex- isting international agreements they cannot be extradited from Colombia or prosecuted at home. So these dealers continue in business, supplying much of the cocaine sold in New York and other major-cities. The lack of adequate extradi- tion agreements and treaties with Latin American nations to allow the prosecution of major drug traffickers in their own countries has been a major stumbling block in the efforts of United States agents to stem the rising flow of narcotics from Latin America. Many law enforcement offi- cials involved in those efforts are critical of the State Depart- ment for not pushing to achieve such agreements and treaties. What is missing from the United States effort in Latin America, they say, is the kind of concerted drive the United States Government made at its highest levels a few years ago to persuade France to go all out against what had then been the major narcotics traffic into this country. The heroin traffic from France was seriously disrupted, they remember, after France responded to such pressure by expanding its own narcotics enforcement units, establishing close investigative cooperation with United States agencies and agreeing to prosecute French traffickers on evidence gathered in the United States. "We started off strong with Latin America, too," said one official, who, like others, re- quested anonimity because of his professional relationship with State Department. "But with all the Watergate prob- lems, Washington's interest faded and we loft the momen- tum. We haven't .got it back yet." A number of agencies are involved in the United States ca, but the most active are the Federal Drug Enforcement Administration, the Central In- telligence Agency and the Agency for International Devel- opment. Individual agents work under the supervision of the United States ambassador in the country in which they are posted. The over-all narcotics effort, however, is directed from Washington by the Cabinet Committee of International Narcotics Control, which is headed by the Secretary of State and which has among its members the Attorney Gen- eral and the Secretaries of Agriculture and Defense. But officials from several participating agencies believe that Secretary of State Kissin- Iger has little interest in the narcotics effort and that, as a result, many American diplo- mats in Latin America haven't devoted themselves whole- heartedly to it either. Kissinger Is Defended A State Department spokes- man denied such allegations. "Obviously he's been busy with other problems," he said of Secretary Kissinger. "But if he didn't have i strong interest in narcotics control, he wouldn't remain as chairman of the cabinet committee." Evidence of the Secretary's concern with the narcotics problem, the spokesman said, is the strong support Mr. Kis- singer has given the com- mittee's executive director, Ambassador Sheldon Vance, a career diplomat who coordi- nates United States narcotics control efforts throughout' the world. The United States declared narcotics control a "major" foreign policy goal four years ago, but some diplomats to South America concede they have not yet given it that kind of attention. "I must admit I haven't reeis- tered our concern about narco. tics sufficiently with the top people here," said one ambas- sador. "We've had so many little crises." Another diplomat said, "We could jeopardize our relations by pushing too hard on narco- tics. These countries don't have a drug problem themselves. There's no mutual interest to work ljvith." Wlulfr. some narcotics officials have been grumbling about lack of support from the State De- partment, the most active and visible of the agencies fighting narcotics abroad-the Drug En- forcement Administration-has come under its own share of criticism, much of it from the Senate Permanent Subcommit- tee on Investigations headed by Senator Henry M. Jackson. `Ineffectiveness' Is Explored The subcommittee is now conducting an investigation of the agency and will hold hear- ings later this spring. But a spokesman for Senator Jackson said that the subcommittee has collected information showing that the agency-has been "inef- fective" on several fronts in Latin America and that its agents have been involved in situations that threaten to em- barrass the United States. "No one person from the subcommittee has come down here to see what we're doing," countered Louis Bachrach. the Drug Enforcement Administra- tion regional director for South America. The spokesman for Senator Jackson said the subcommittee may send investigators to South America later, but that it was now concentrating on studying the agency's files. Mr. Bachrach and his staff maintain that the agency's achievements in South America ,have been significant. Since the Drug Enforcement Administra- tion was formed in July, 1973, he said, cooperative efforts with the police in South Ameri- ca have resulted in the destruc- ition of 73 cocaine laboratories, the arrest of 457 important traffickers and the seizure of more than 1,300 kilograms of cocaine and cocaine base. Furthermore, Mr. Bachrach said, agents in his region should be credited for wiping out the South American Con- nection, the rings headed by Corsican gangsters that former- ly handled 35 per cent of all the French heroin entering the United States. The South American Connec- tion collapsed after a series of arrests, extraditions and ex- pulsions of the major Corsican traffickers operating in Latin America. Cocaine Gains Cited Another achievement cited by Mr. Bachrach was the dis- ruption of cocaine production in Chile. Shipments of cocaine to the United States from Chile have now been reduced from more than 200 kilos a month to less than ten, he said. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 The important advance in The Drug Enforcement Admi- When ,the plane arrived with "They [the C.I:A] were so fighting narcotics in Chile came nistration calls "Operation the United States agents it protective of their informants, after the military coup against Springboard" a success. But it, shooting broke out, with we couldn't make cases with President Salvador Allende, Mr. a number of the expelled traf- each police group thinking thr what they gave us," he said. Bachrach -said. The junta that fickers have appealed their con- other was the traffickers. "But in the lase year we've overthrew him agreed to expel victions in Federal courts. Although no one was killed, settled our differences." 19 Chilean traffickers to the maintaining that their right" newspapers in Colombia la- The C.I.A. was; asked to join United States, where they faced under due process were violat- beled the incident a "Keystone the campaign against narcoticla narcotics charges, even though ed because they were kid- Kop raid" and back in Wash- by President Ninon in 1971, they were Chilean citizens. napped. ington, Senator Jackson termed but apparently ts agents in Most of the other traffickers, The Federal Court of Appeals it "greatly disturbing." South America have never talc fearing similar action against has upheld the contention of Mr. Bartels, the Drug En- en fully to the id a. them, fled the country, he said. one defendant, Francisco Tos- forcement Administrator. One of the reasons given he said. canino, an alleged associate of thought his men performed well for the C.I..A 's discontent i5 Chilean officials cite several Lucien Sarti and Auguste under the circumstances. "A]- that while agars missions in factors for taking such unusual Joseph Ricord of the South though under attack neither South America ha -e been riven American Connection. Mr. Tos- of them fired their guns," he extra'funds for narcotics work, action against the traffickers. canino said his rights were they have not deceived addi- "We don't want to wind up said. "And they got 23,000 they tional men, except in Ar en- p g with a big drug to win like violated because he was tor- pounds of marijuana." tins. g g problem tured by the police in Brazil, 'Buy and Bust'. . the United States has," said the country that expelled him. y Some drug enforcement Lieut. Col. Luis Fountaine, head' The Government now is ap- The drug enforcement agents agents said that he C.I.A. has of the narcotics unit of the pealing the Toscanino decision in Latin America also are criti- helped them on several levels Chilean Carabineros. "We want to the Supreme Court. It has cized by Senator Jackson and in South Amerii:a, providing; to nip it in the bud." been upheld thus far on all others for allegedly relying ex- them with intelligence reports "There is evidence that sup- other appeals by defendants cessively on the "buy and bust" on the narcotics tjraffic in each porters of Allende have been extradited from Latin America method of getting indictments. country and on political power involved in narcotics," Colonel and later In such cases, an agent works structures. Fountaine added. When pressed violations convicted of drug vhere. under pover to buy drugs and "If we want to ~oax a fugitive to discuss such evidence, he Mr. Bachrach said that if when the sale is grade, the trafficker to a third country said that he hadn't seen it Mr. Toscanino was tortured in local police arrest the seller, to expel him toy the States," himself, but that the junta's Brazil; it was done without the undercover "buyer" some- one narcotics agtnt explained, intelligence agency was in nos- the knowledge of his agents. how managing to escape. "they can tell us if he's got session of it. "Our men are instructed to The buy -and - bust method enough null in that country Unit Is Eliminated get the message to local police could prove politically embar- to beat us there." Despite its energetic prosecu that torture is not professional rassing to the United States. Effort Is In paired tion of narcotics traffickers, or productive and cases in an aide to Senator Jackson The drug agency's effort was the Chilean junta did not hesi- which torture is used will not said, if the agent is exposed mpaired earlier r this year, tate to eliminate the Customs stand up in the States," he or shot during an arrest Or however, when itRckrtov;ledged Investigative Agency, by all ac- said. "We have a vested inter- what would happen, he asked that it had hired 5,? former C.I.A. counts the most effective police est in discouraging torture." if the agent shot a national in agents. The disclosure upset unit fighting narcotics in Chile. Building Some Bridges his own country. many South American officials, It is believed that the junta Agents in Latin America who maintained thrif it would ] Although they cannot make maintain that they don't rely he imnosible to tell narcotics did so because the unit had arrests in Latin America, Fed- on the buv-and-bust meihod agents from spies.; been identified closely with eral narcotics agents there de- frequently, but have developed As a result, Mr. Bartels said, President Allende. velop cases and turn them over other techninues that allow the agenc v has found resistance The head of the unit was to the local police. When the them to keep a low profile. n trvinn to open four nev6 Luis Sanguinetti. a friend of police then go to make arrests in eight of the 12 Drug Fn- offices in South 4merica-two President Allende's. He and his on the cases, the agents accom- forcement Administration offi- n Colombia and two in Brazil top assistants were arrested panv them. cec in South America. "special _Nvhirh were considered neL, immediately after the coup and "too many things happen action units" patterned on simi- cessary for adequate coverage. his body was later found n to foil up the case when w( lar grouns m"inthined by th' of the continent. the hold of a ship taking politi- don't," said an agent in Ecuador. Central Intelligence Agents. Mr. Bartels said that none cal prisoners to an island pri- The task of drug enforcement have been established. of the former C.I.A' . agents now son. agents is complicated by the The agents in these units with the agency is ser?;jng as The junta said that Mr. San- fact that many countries have hire local investigators, some a drug enforcen7?nt agent in guinetti committed suicide by more than one police force- of them po9re officers, to con- South America. lumping head first into the sometimes three or four - duct sui,'eillance. ohserve ar In an attemoti to reassure hold. His two assistants were working on narcotics, and the rests and perform other func- South American officials, ;ttr. shot while allegedly trying to various police units are some- Lions that the United State Rartels said he j tended to in- escape from detention, and two times fervent rivals. agents cannot do without risk- vice Latin narco ics agents tl5 others were killed in a shootout To keep on good terms with ing exposure. come to the United States and with the police. the different police groups, Some of the special units work with his own men here. Another accomplishment drug enforcement agents from are said to he quite effective. "We want them to see thaf: which Mr. Bachrach cited n the United States try to distri- In Buerns Aires, for example. we're net C.I.A. and that we response to criticism of his hole the cases they develop to when terrorists began kidnap- don't mean narcotics coApera- agency is the removal of 57 ail the various local police units. ring diplnm'ats. the United Lion to be a 'ono-way street,". fugitive Latin American drug But the potential hazards of States ambassador asked the he said. traffickers to the United States police rivalry within fatir head of the narcotics aeencv's intelligence Area Lags through a campaign called American countries were illus- special action unit to set tin a Ironically, the Drug Enforce "Operation Springboard." Crated in March when United security comnenv to provide 'lent ?Administra ton effort in The operation was conceived States narcotics agents heard rarotection for high officials in Smith America p'obably needs as a means of getting around that a 23,000-pound cache of the en?ihnssy. the refusal of almost all Latin marijuana was hidden in a spot The Drug EnforcementAdmin- that is em the ent strength in an area rngth the countries to extradite their own 180 miles south of Bogoti. istration also has been criti- C.I.A. hat ntelljge gathering ng nationals. Since existing trea- Two drug enforcement agents '-ized hN' members of the ,lack- anC- intelligence nn.! For example, ties do not allow for evidence told the Colombian custntr' son committee for failing to in the e ag agency's cy's ii r Fo egional l head- collected in the United States po!ire about the marijuana and cooperate with the Central in . to be used against traffickers ti~rnce Agency in dve1onin Quarters in Caracas. only one accompanied them in a privatr tel g - staff member handles intelin their native countries, driie plane to the spot. Unknown. a unified attack against narcot- ligence duties for all of South enforcement agents in Latin to the agent. however, the ics traffickers. America. America decided to coax traf- Colombian security police also M. r. A'rtels acknowledged "We've , tickers to third countries and had been informed of the same that differences between the had three more to try to perucj~ ~irrrjfygs e ' v: aitjn to go down for there to expe ~Ffi ce~~~~lJ eeFol'a '1VA?kF /O: Cl AR `7 .e~ItJ 7i5~t~fl i 10 0' ~~the' C.I.A. furor United States. ^f informants has held us back," Mr. Bartels said. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1 In addition to enforcement efforts, American agencies in Latin America are trying to~ fight narcotics through a varies tv of training and assistance programs. Over the last three years, the United States has provided an average of S22-mil- lion annually in grant assis- tance for fighting narcotics. The largest chunk of assis= tance for narcotics control In Latin .America-`612-million last year-has gone to Mexico re- flecting the high priority giver it, Washington to diminishit16 the flow of Mexican heron to- the United Stataes. In South America. many of the narcotics assistance pro, grams are being implemented by the Agency for International. Development. The agency oper- ates training classes fo, narcof; ics and customs police and arranges for material assistance, such as communications equip- ment, vehicles and weapons. Picking the Priority Still, the assistance programs and the enforcement efforts have not appreciably stemmed the flew of drugs to the United States. The best way to stop the drug traffic, enforcement offi- cials believe, is to go after the major traffickers in their own countries. They point out that the co- caine traffic in Chile and the heroin traffic in France were disrupted when major traffick- ers in those countries were either expelled or prosecuted. even when the evidence -was gathered elsewhere. "As long as traffickers feel safe in their own countries" said Frank Maco!ini, the Drug Enforcement Administration's deputy regional director for South America, "they're going to keep sending drugs to ours." Narcotic Agei From the time he was a young boy, the son of the local constable in the sleepy Texas town of Palacios, George Frangullie "always wanted to be a cop." Now, at 37 years old, he is the special agent in charge of the Federal Drug Enforce- ment Administration office in Santiago, Chile, and an important component in the United States narcotics effort in Latin America. Mr. Frangullie is a man who clearly enjoys his work. But there have been prob- lems. He had an assistant, Charles Cecil, until eight months ago when 'M.r. Cecil and his wife were shot at while driving home from g movie. Mr. Cecil was trans- ferred to Colombia and now Mr. Frangullie must break in a new man. In addition, he must cope with the frustrations every Federal narcotics agent faces in Latin America. He has to maintain a low profile, stay on good terms with operatives from rival police forces and let local authori- ties make cases he has de- veloped. Nevertheless, Mr. Frangullie delights in trying to get around these prob- lems. "There are two ways to work as a cop." he says. "You can use traditional meth- ods or you can try to come up with new ideas." Transforms Situation Mr. Frangullie's skill in de- veloping new ideas has helped to transform the drug situation in Chile in the two years he has been posted there. Today most of the traffickers in Chile have fled the country as a result of one of Mr. Frangullie's untraditional methods. Latin - American countries generally will not extradite their own nationals who have been indicted on drug viola- tions in the United States. 'But after the overthrow of the government of Salvador Allende in i l9;3, Mr. Fran- gullie found the situation there more "flexible." He discovered a loophole In the law through which he has so far threaded 19 major Chilean drug traffickers. As he tells it, "A friend of mine came to my office with the official gazette and showed me an article about a new law that had gone into ef- fect. It said that any person -alien or Chilean-who threatens the security of the state, can be expelled from the country. "At 4 the next morning, it hit me that we could use that law to'. expel major Chilean traffickers to the United States where they were under indictment. I had a meeting with the Minister of the In- terior and pointed out to him that profits from cocaine could he used oy radical groups to buy arms and am- munition. The minister said 'Go' and we chartered a Boe- ing 707 to take nine traffick- ers to New York." Mr. Frangullie and the six Chilean police officials who accompanied the traffickers found the ride an eventful one. Mr. Frangullie knew that most of thl? cases against these men had been devel- oped years before by Thomas Duggan, an experienced Fed- eral agent in New York who had since g"ven up all hope of seeing them brought to justice. Mr. Frangullie arranged to have Mr. Duggan at the air- port in New York so he could see his face when the Chileans were brought off the plane. Most Traffickers Curbed Since then 10 more traf- fickers have been expelled to the United States from Chile under the same law and most of the remaining traffickers under indictment are believed to have fled the country in fear of meet- ing the same fate. The hard line taken against traffickers by the ruling jun- ta has made Mr. Frangullie's iob easier. "But I made good cases under Allende," he says. "I've received good cooperation ever since I got here." Mr. Fran?gullie spent two years in college before leav- ing to join the Houston police force. HP found a tour of duty in the narcotics division so stimulating that he joined United States Customs In 1964. Four years later he switched to the Federal Bu- reau of Narcotics and Danger- ous Drugs, which became the Drug Enforcement Admin- istration in 1973, the same year he was sent to Chile. His wife, Anita, whom he met in a Texas drugstore, has found it difficult raising two children-a boy of II and a girl of fi-in a foreign country. So Mr. Frangullie has asked for a stateside assignment at the end of the year. But as he talks about moving, it's clear he doesn't look forward to it. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100400001-1