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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NY: Exhibit Links Terror, Drug Traffic
Title:US NY: Exhibit Links Terror, Drug Traffic
Published On:2004-09-12
Source:USA Today (US)
Fetched On:2008-08-21 23:23:53
EXHIBIT LINKS TERROR, DRUG TRAFFIC

NEW YORK - The crumpled green 1994 Thunderbird is a jarring sight in
the lobby of One Times Square. The driver, DEA agents say, was high on
cocaine, barbiturates and marijuana when he hit and killed a
31-year-old Ohio woman. The man is serving 10 years.

The car is the opening assault in an exhibit meant to lay bare the
harsh world of illicit drugs from the intensely personal car accident
to the global financing of rebel armies and terrorists.

Target America: Drug Traffickers, Terrorists and You is
an expanded version of a Drug Enforcement
Administration Museum traveling exhibit that opens here Tuesday.

The exhibit, housed in three floors of borrowed space, is designed to
illustrate through graphic photos and artifacts the societal costs of
the production, trafficking and use of illegal drugs.

"I want Americans to realize that, although they may not use drugs,
everyone is impacted by drug use in this country," DEA administrator
Karen Tandy says. "That car represents the threat to every one of us
on the road."

The car is the centerpiece of a field of debris piled in the lobby
ofthe tall retail-and-office building. The wreck is surrounded by drug
paraphernalia and barrels of chemicals used to make methamphetamine,
as well as broken toys representing children neglected by drug-addled
parents.

The overriding theme of the exhibit, visible from Times Square through
plate-glass windows, is the link between drug trafficking and global
terrorism.

The exhibit invites visitors to trace the path of cocaine and heroin
from drug labs in Afghanistan and Colombia to the pockets of
insurgents in Colombia and Peru and to such terrorist organizations as
Hezbollah.

But it also makes a more controversial link between terrorism and the
9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. The exhibit
includes a large display of debris collected from both sites. The
exhibit does not specifically tie the attacks to drug trafficking, but
it uses the events to explain how terrorists use the drug trade as one
of several methods to fund attacks. It cites U.S. intelligence linking
the Taliban in Afghanistan, and by extension its thriving heroin
economy, to Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda.

"Someone who thinks he or she is making an individual choice that
won't harm anyone else is not seeing the larger picture of where their
money eventually goes," says Anthony Placido, special agent in charge
of the New York division of the DEA.

In Peru, for example, Shining Path insurgents "killed thousands of
people, destroyed the economy, reduced the country to rubble, and paid
for it all with the cocaine trade," Placido says.

After 9/11, Americans shifted their focus from the war on drugs to the
war on terror, Placido says. The exhibit, he says, will help relate
the illicit drug trade to homeland security.

"The same techniques used to smuggle in drugs can be used to smuggle
in weapons of mass destruction," Placido says. Terrorists and drug
criminals "fish out of the same sewer."

Although the exhibit includes the events of Sept. 11, it takes a
broader look at the drug trade, tracing its history from the Silk Road
routes between China and Europe, says Sean Fearns, director of the
exhibit and also the small DEA museum in the agency's headquarters in
Arlington, Va.

The Times Square exhibit is loaded with whiz-bang law enforcement
memorabilia. Visitors can peek into an actual cocaine lab uncovered by
DEA agents in Colombia, dismantled and shipped to the USA; a Stinger
missile launcher; heroin tax receipts from the Taliban; Ecstasy pills;
and photos of arrested drug kingpins.

On the second floor, visitors will see a replica of a crack den
cluttered with soiled diapers and guns. There are photographs of
children rescued from their parents' meth labs, including one who was
covered in car battery acid.

A "Wall of Lost Talent" is a display of prom, graduation and school
photos of those who have died because of drugs. Visitors are
encouraged to leave photos of friends and family members who have been
harmed by drugs.

Parts of the exhibit have traveled to other cities,
including Dallas and Omaha. Sections may go on the road
again; no schedule has been set. In New York, hours are
9 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily through January. Information:
www.usdoj.gov/dea/deamuseum/Web site/index.html.

Admission is free.
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