Pubdate: Mon, 05 Nov 2007
Source: Victoria Advocate (TX)
Copyright: 2007 Victoria Advocate Publishing Company
Contact:  http://www.thevictoriaadvocate.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/671
Author: Sonny Long, Victoria Advocate

COOPERATION A MUST IN WAR ON DRUGS

The silence of  a South Texas sunrise is broken by the sounds of
shouting, fists banging on doors, and the metallic  clank of handcuffs
as they clamp around yet another  pair of wrists.

Interagency drug raids with neighboring law enforcement  departments
and other agencies have become a standard  practice for rounding up
known drug offenders in small  towns. Interagency cooperation is not a
new concept,  said Cuero Police Chief Glenn Mutchler, who recalled
cooperative efforts 25 years ago among the Edna --  where he was an
officer -- Yoakum and Cuero police  departments.

More recently, a raid in Refugio in August resulted in  28 arrests on
41 indictments, the largest roundup in  the city's history and the
second largest in the county  since a 1994 grand jury issued 54
indictments.

The interagency cooperative effort featured officers  from the Refugio
and Victoria police departments,  Refugio County Sheriff's Office
deputies, and  Department of Public Safety troopers. Beeville police
also assisted with some of the administrative workload.

"It was fun seeing all the agencies working together,"  Refugio Police
Chief Chris Brock said soon after the  raids.

Area law enforcement officials agree that cooperation  among agencies
is a vital tool.

"Before the cooperation can really be effective each  agency involved
must have knowledge of the local  problem, begin to address it, and
have knowledge of how  it ties into the regional narcotic related
issues,"  Mutchler said.

The Cuero chief added that communication is the key to  any successful
operation and how the operations come  together vary. Most of the
time, the investigative part  of the operation is handled by the local
agency, with  other departments lending a hand when manpower is
needed to conduct round ups.

"During Operation Cooperation in 2006, each agency  involved had a
contact and that smaller group worked  together to organize the
operation. Then, the DeWitt  County Sheriff's Office took the lead in
planning the  roundup," Mutchler said.

Even open and constant communication can't offset what  is usually the
biggest problem facing these operations,  manpower.

"Scheduling issues are the biggest obstacle," the Cuero  chief said.
"All of our departments are small with  limited budgets and limited
personnel."

The loss a couple of years ago of partially  state-funded
multi-jurisdictional task forces has  forced small departments to work
even more closely with  each other. Some departments were affected
more than  others, depending on how much the task forces assisted
them while they were operational.

"We were basically left high and dry," said Glen  Sachtleben, Gonzales
County sheriff. "We work closely  with the DPS and any other source of
manpower,  expertise and equipment that we can."

But DPS faces the same manpower issues as other  agencies.

"We are no different than any other agency. We're  stretched thin. We
try to help, but we have nine  counties and four narcotics troopers.
We're ready to  help, but it's on a 'when we can' basis," said Lt.
Bubba Forester of DPS Narcotics in Victoria.

The DPS narcotics mission has also changed with the  times, Forester
said.

"Instead of one ounce at a time, that doesn't work any  more, we spend
our time going after the larger  organizations," he said. "We want to
cut the head off."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Derek