News (Media Awareness Project) - US LA: Hard Work Brings Recognition To DEA |
Title: | US LA: Hard Work Brings Recognition To DEA |
Published On: | 2003-01-25 |
Source: | Times, The (LA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-28 15:01:49 |
HARD WORK BRINGS RECOGNITION TO DEA
For Shreveport police Sgt. Richard Childers and other members of the Drug
Enforcement Administration Task Force based in Shreveport, 60 hour work
weeks are common.
During the last year, task force agents have shut down an international
ecstasy smuggling ring, infiltrated an outlaw motorcycle gang suspected of
distributing methamphetamines and arrested a jewelry store owner believed
to have been importing ecstasy.
That work has not gone unnoticed.
Fourteen task force agents, including Childers, received commendations for
outstanding service Thursday afternoon. The awards are part of an
Administrators Award for Outstanding Group Achievement awarded to the
Shreveport Resident office, Resident Agent in Charge Bill Grant said.
"This is an outstanding achievement for this office considering how very
few personnel we have and the area we cover," Grant said.
The Shreveport Regional office was one of only four regional DEA offices
worldwide to receive a similar award. And of those 600 regional offices,
the Shreveport office is among one of the smallest, Grant said.
"They have done a bang-up job," Shreveport police spokeswoman Kacee
Hargrave said. "They've gotten a lot of drugs off the streets."
Shreveport police have a number of officers assigned to the DEA task force,
Hargrave said. The Caddo sheriff's office and Louisiana state police have
also assigned officers to the task force.
The work those officers do is time consuming and often dangerous.
"They live the kind of lives that give normal people nightmares at night,"
Shreveport police Assistant Chief Charlie Owens said.
That lifestyle is paying off, Childers said.
"There are times when you bring down a whole (drug) organization," Childers
said. "You can see dope getting scarce and the prices driven up."
For Shreveport police Sgt. Richard Childers and other members of the Drug
Enforcement Administration Task Force based in Shreveport, 60 hour work
weeks are common.
During the last year, task force agents have shut down an international
ecstasy smuggling ring, infiltrated an outlaw motorcycle gang suspected of
distributing methamphetamines and arrested a jewelry store owner believed
to have been importing ecstasy.
That work has not gone unnoticed.
Fourteen task force agents, including Childers, received commendations for
outstanding service Thursday afternoon. The awards are part of an
Administrators Award for Outstanding Group Achievement awarded to the
Shreveport Resident office, Resident Agent in Charge Bill Grant said.
"This is an outstanding achievement for this office considering how very
few personnel we have and the area we cover," Grant said.
The Shreveport Regional office was one of only four regional DEA offices
worldwide to receive a similar award. And of those 600 regional offices,
the Shreveport office is among one of the smallest, Grant said.
"They have done a bang-up job," Shreveport police spokeswoman Kacee
Hargrave said. "They've gotten a lot of drugs off the streets."
Shreveport police have a number of officers assigned to the DEA task force,
Hargrave said. The Caddo sheriff's office and Louisiana state police have
also assigned officers to the task force.
The work those officers do is time consuming and often dangerous.
"They live the kind of lives that give normal people nightmares at night,"
Shreveport police Assistant Chief Charlie Owens said.
That lifestyle is paying off, Childers said.
"There are times when you bring down a whole (drug) organization," Childers
said. "You can see dope getting scarce and the prices driven up."
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