Pubdate: Wed, 20 Sep 2000 Source: Daily Southtown (IL) Copyright: 2000 Daily Southtown Contact: 6901 W. 159th St., Tinley Park, IL 60477 Fax: (708) 633-5999 Website: http://www.dailysouthtown.com/ Author: James E. Gierach BETTER SUBS FOR DRUGS The drug business is so lucrative that drug cartels can afford custom-built drug submarines to ship their wares. Everyone knows that the drug war puts more drugs everywhere on land and sea, but not everyone knows that it also puts drugs by the ton under the high seas. Take a chief of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency for example. Drug-subs are apparently news to him. Leo Arreguin, the DEA chief in Colombia, commented about the recently discovered half-built, 100-foot mountain-bound, drug-sub outside Bogota: "In the 30 some-odd years I have been in law enforcement I have never seen anything like this." Mr. Arreguin apparently missed the news some years ago. In September 1994, the Reuters news service reported that subs were the hottest thing in drug transshipment. The 1994 report was prompted by the seizure of a radar-guided mini-submarine capable of smuggling three tons of narcotics out to sea. The little 30-foot drug-sub was designed for a three-man crew. The newly discovered 100-foot Noah's Ark II drug-sub is capable of transporting an estimated 200 tons of cocaine at a crack. Why the bigger subs? According to U.S. drug czar Barry McCaffrey, cocaine production in Colombia is "exploding." The late Amado Carrillo Fuentes, "Lord of the Skies," used to have cocaine tonnage flown into the U.S. in 747s. The late Al Capone had Canadian whisky shipped by truck. Colombian prohibition chieftains are using submarines. American drug policy attracts drugs by the ton for prosecution by the gram — by land, sea and air. Not smart. James E. Gierach, Oak Lawn - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck