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Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 14, 2004
30
Drug Trafficking Suspects Arrested
Federal agents from Dallas led raids in Oklahoma
and Arkansas
MAY
14 A
special team of Drug Enforcement Administration agents from Dallas
helped arrest more than 30 methamphetamine trafficking suspects in
Oklahoma and Arkansas on Wednesday, May 5, 2004.
The
early-morning roundup stems from a six-month investigation in which
the DEA team, assisted by state and federal authorities from Oklahoma
and Arkansas, worked undercover to arrest major drug distributors.
“This
is another example of how the public and their communities benefit
from the combined resources of the combined resources of area law enforcement,” said
Gary Olenkiewicz, Special Agent in Charge of the DEA’s Dallas
division. “The citizens are able to see tangible results that
make their communities safer.”
More
than 100 law enforcement officers, beginning at 4a.m., conducted simultaneous
raids to serve federal arrest warrants on people suspected of trafficking
methamphetamine.
The
investigation dubbed “Hot B” by the officers and agents,
started when Pocola, Oklahoma, police began suspecting that major methamphetamine
distributors were using Choctaw Gaming Center in eastern Oklahoma as
a base of operations.
“These
drug traffickers were using the Indian tribal land as a method of escaping
state law enforcement,” LeFlore County District Attorney Rob
Wallace said in a prepared statement. “Federal authorities’ help
was needed to provide jurisdiction to investigate the drug ring,” Mr.
Wallace said.
The
DEA’s Dallas division, which covers northern and eastern Texas
and all of Oklahoma, deployed a Mobile Enforcement Team in November
2003 to help other federal agencies, including the FBI and Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, investigate the case.
For
this operation, the DEA agents bought record amounts of methamphetamine,
Mr. Wallace said. The investigation also led to drug arrests in Fort
Coffee, Okla., and Fort Smith, Arkansas. The case will be tried in
state and federal courts in Arkansas and Oklahoma.
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