News (Media Awareness Project) - US GA: Quiet Atlanta Suburbs Draw Drug Cartels |
Title: | US GA: Quiet Atlanta Suburbs Draw Drug Cartels |
Published On: | 2009-05-26 |
Source: | Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA) |
Fetched On: | 2009-05-26 15:36:45 |
QUIET ATLANTA SUBURBS DRAW DRUG CARTELS
The man who lived on a quiet cul-de-sac in Forsyth County appeared to
be an ordinary guy.
He ran a small fencing company. His grade-school-aged children played
with others in the subdivision. His lifestyle was simple and unassuming.
Neighbors in the Whisper Walk subdivision in Cumming had no idea that
Paul Longoria was using his business as a front for cocaine
trafficking until authorities arrested him in 2007. He was sentenced
to 12 years in prison on felony drug charges a year later in federal court.
"We were shocked," said Kevin Hopkins, who lives two doors down from
Longoria's former home. "He was a real quiet guy."
Suburban Atlanta may not be so quiet anymore. Federal authorities say
the footprint of operations for Mexican cartels is expanding beyond
the city and its immediate suburbs into outlying rural counties and
even areas of North Carolina.
Last year, the Office of National Drug Control Policy labeled Barrow,
Bartow, Cherokee, Clayton, Douglas, Fayette and Forsyth counties as
high-intensity drug trafficking areas. That designation allows the
counties to receive federal grant money and training to combat the problem.
Capt. Paul Taylor, commander of criminal investigations for the
Forsyth County Sheriff's Office, said the discovery of Paul
Longoria's drug smuggling operation in Cumming was an eye-opener.
"When we saw that -- in that quantity, involving that much money --
it kind of opened a new door there," Taylor said. "It was something
we had not seen before."
Sheriff Roger Garrison of Cherokee County said he is seeing the same
trends in his area, particularly along the southwest border of
Cherokee, where there has been a rise in drug-related home invasions.
"One of the most alarming trends of the last 12 to 18 months is the
amount of violence involved with these primarily Hispanic gangs that
are moving some pretty major amounts of drugs," Garrison said.
The Mexican cartels responsible for transporting 99 percent of
illicit drugs into the United States are "studiously low-key," said
Jack Killorin, director of the Atlanta High Intensity Drug
Trafficking Area task force.
"They are trying not to interact in the communities in a way which
draws attention," Killorin said.
Those methods are in stark contrast to the high-profile "Miami Vice"
days. Mexican drug traders do not live in fancy houses or terrorize
the community at large. Most are recruited from Mexico and still live
in Mexico. Very little of their profits are even spent in the United
States, Killorin said.
Killorin said Mexican drug trafficking organizations are running an
estimated $28.5 billion-a-year business, and yet the U.S. government
only intercepts about $1 billion of it.
Last year, the Atlanta division of the Drug Enforcement
Administration intercepted about $70 million of the drug lords' cash,
more than any other region in the country.
Chuvalo Truesdell, a spokesman for the DEA, said Atlanta is primarily
a "cocaine town," but Mexican cartels also deal in marijuana,
methamphetamine and black tar heroin here. They often rent houses in
middle-class neighborhoods to conduct their illegal activities, and
owners and neighbors are clueless, Truesdell said.
Drug trafficking organizations, especially the Sinaloa and Gulf
cartels, use Atlanta as a distribution hub because it sits astride
major interstates, Killorin said.
An international airport, extensive rail system and proximity to the
port in Savannah are key to moving shipments throughout the eastern
United States.
Metro Atlanta's core counties of Gwinnett, DeKalb, Cobb and Fulton
were labeled high-intensity drug-trafficking areas several years ago.
Experts say Gwinnett is an epicenter of trafficking. Gwinnett police
seized record amounts of drugs in 2005, 2006 and 2007.
Cartel operatives find it easier to "hide in plain sight" among the
county's large Hispanic immigrant population, Killorin said.
About 17 percent of the county's 776,000 people are Hispanic,
according to the Pew Hispanic Center.
Last month, local police and federal agents raided 10 locations the
Gulf cartel allegedly used to warehouse drugs and money in Gwinnett.
Seventeen suspected members of the Gulf cartel were arrested as a
result of the investigation, dubbed Operation Grand Finale.
Average citizens in the United States have been largely untouched by
cartel violence and thefts, although there have been instances of
kidnappings and killings within the drug smugglers' ranks, said
Gwinnett County District Attorney Danny Porter.
"At this point we're not seeing the type of street warfare they are
seeing in Mexico, where citizens are endangered," said Porter.
What has members of the federal narcotics task force worried is that
instability within cartels could result in more violence.
In March 2008, federal authorities say cartel operatives were behind
a home invasion robbery at an apartment complex off Beaver Ruin Road
near Norcross.
Two men suspected of drug involvement were shot and wounded in that incident.
Twenty high-powered assault rifles were seized from suspected Gulf
cartel members during Operation Grand Finale last month.
"If they wanted to have impact on the community, they would have a
dreadful impact in the community," Killorin said.
The man who lived on a quiet cul-de-sac in Forsyth County appeared to
be an ordinary guy.
He ran a small fencing company. His grade-school-aged children played
with others in the subdivision. His lifestyle was simple and unassuming.
Neighbors in the Whisper Walk subdivision in Cumming had no idea that
Paul Longoria was using his business as a front for cocaine
trafficking until authorities arrested him in 2007. He was sentenced
to 12 years in prison on felony drug charges a year later in federal court.
"We were shocked," said Kevin Hopkins, who lives two doors down from
Longoria's former home. "He was a real quiet guy."
Suburban Atlanta may not be so quiet anymore. Federal authorities say
the footprint of operations for Mexican cartels is expanding beyond
the city and its immediate suburbs into outlying rural counties and
even areas of North Carolina.
Last year, the Office of National Drug Control Policy labeled Barrow,
Bartow, Cherokee, Clayton, Douglas, Fayette and Forsyth counties as
high-intensity drug trafficking areas. That designation allows the
counties to receive federal grant money and training to combat the problem.
Capt. Paul Taylor, commander of criminal investigations for the
Forsyth County Sheriff's Office, said the discovery of Paul
Longoria's drug smuggling operation in Cumming was an eye-opener.
"When we saw that -- in that quantity, involving that much money --
it kind of opened a new door there," Taylor said. "It was something
we had not seen before."
Sheriff Roger Garrison of Cherokee County said he is seeing the same
trends in his area, particularly along the southwest border of
Cherokee, where there has been a rise in drug-related home invasions.
"One of the most alarming trends of the last 12 to 18 months is the
amount of violence involved with these primarily Hispanic gangs that
are moving some pretty major amounts of drugs," Garrison said.
The Mexican cartels responsible for transporting 99 percent of
illicit drugs into the United States are "studiously low-key," said
Jack Killorin, director of the Atlanta High Intensity Drug
Trafficking Area task force.
"They are trying not to interact in the communities in a way which
draws attention," Killorin said.
Those methods are in stark contrast to the high-profile "Miami Vice"
days. Mexican drug traders do not live in fancy houses or terrorize
the community at large. Most are recruited from Mexico and still live
in Mexico. Very little of their profits are even spent in the United
States, Killorin said.
Killorin said Mexican drug trafficking organizations are running an
estimated $28.5 billion-a-year business, and yet the U.S. government
only intercepts about $1 billion of it.
Last year, the Atlanta division of the Drug Enforcement
Administration intercepted about $70 million of the drug lords' cash,
more than any other region in the country.
Chuvalo Truesdell, a spokesman for the DEA, said Atlanta is primarily
a "cocaine town," but Mexican cartels also deal in marijuana,
methamphetamine and black tar heroin here. They often rent houses in
middle-class neighborhoods to conduct their illegal activities, and
owners and neighbors are clueless, Truesdell said.
Drug trafficking organizations, especially the Sinaloa and Gulf
cartels, use Atlanta as a distribution hub because it sits astride
major interstates, Killorin said.
An international airport, extensive rail system and proximity to the
port in Savannah are key to moving shipments throughout the eastern
United States.
Metro Atlanta's core counties of Gwinnett, DeKalb, Cobb and Fulton
were labeled high-intensity drug-trafficking areas several years ago.
Experts say Gwinnett is an epicenter of trafficking. Gwinnett police
seized record amounts of drugs in 2005, 2006 and 2007.
Cartel operatives find it easier to "hide in plain sight" among the
county's large Hispanic immigrant population, Killorin said.
About 17 percent of the county's 776,000 people are Hispanic,
according to the Pew Hispanic Center.
Last month, local police and federal agents raided 10 locations the
Gulf cartel allegedly used to warehouse drugs and money in Gwinnett.
Seventeen suspected members of the Gulf cartel were arrested as a
result of the investigation, dubbed Operation Grand Finale.
Average citizens in the United States have been largely untouched by
cartel violence and thefts, although there have been instances of
kidnappings and killings within the drug smugglers' ranks, said
Gwinnett County District Attorney Danny Porter.
"At this point we're not seeing the type of street warfare they are
seeing in Mexico, where citizens are endangered," said Porter.
What has members of the federal narcotics task force worried is that
instability within cartels could result in more violence.
In March 2008, federal authorities say cartel operatives were behind
a home invasion robbery at an apartment complex off Beaver Ruin Road
near Norcross.
Two men suspected of drug involvement were shot and wounded in that incident.
Twenty high-powered assault rifles were seized from suspected Gulf
cartel members during Operation Grand Finale last month.
"If they wanted to have impact on the community, they would have a
dreadful impact in the community," Killorin said.
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