California Narcotics Team At Risk In Budget Crisis

Tchort

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Associated Press

6/28/2009


By DON THOMPSON – 3 hours ago

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California's budget woes could cut a third of the agents from a little-known unit that has played a key role in high-profile cases like Anna Nicole Smith's overdose death and the arrest of murderer Scott Peterson.

State budget negotiators have proposed cutting $20 million from the Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement, on top of $12 million in previous cuts from the bureau.

Attorney General Jerry Brown, a Democrat whose department oversees the narcotics bureau, said the cuts would lead to layoffs for nearly a third of its 187 agents.

"It's a terrible budgetary decision," Brown said. "The Bureau of Narcotics enforcement has some of the best-trained agents in the world that are going after drug cartels, that are providing assistance to local law enforcement agencies," Brown said.

Without the bureau's help, the local agencies will be outmanned and outgunned, he said. The agency, part of the California Department of Justice, works under the radar, he said, with plainclothes agents operating in a dangerous underworld.

But Senate Budget Committee Chairwoman Denise Ducheny, D-San Diego, said lawmakers have little choice. The state faces a projected $24.3 billion budget deficit and already is making billions of dollars in cuts to education, health care, welfare and other social programs.

The proposed cuts are contained in the Democratic budget plan being considered by the Legislature.

The bureau was created during Prohibition, in 1927, predating the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration by nearly half a century. In recent years, its focus has been on stamping out large-scale methamphetamine and marijuana operations.

The bureau has also become expert in electronic surveillance and tracking fugitives.

Agents used those skills to help arrest Scott Peterson, who is awaiting execution for killing his pregnant wife and unborn child on Christmas Eve 2002. Authorities feared the Modesto fertilizer salesman was about to flee from San Diego to Mexico after he grew a beard and colored his hair blond.

Also, a two-year investigation by state and federal narcotics agents led to charges in March against two Los Angeles doctors and the lawyer-turned-boyfriend of Anna Nicole Smith. The former Playboy centerfold died in Florida of an accidental overdose of a sleeping medication and at least eight other prescription drugs.

And in years past, bureau agents helped investigate the Hells Angels, which agents said was once one of the state's major methamphetamine-trafficking organizations.

Brown said the layoffs would severely hamper, if not eliminate, 51 multi-agency task forces operating throughout California. Those task forces — which the bureau coordinates — track down marijuana plantations often operated by Mexican drug cartels in forests and national parks, and major methamphetamine operations in the Central Valley that provide much of the nation's supply.

Ducheny said the state may be able to make up for the funding cuts with federal drug enforcement money. But the attorney general's office is skeptical that such funding can be diverted, spokesman Scott Gerber said.

The proposed budget cut comes as production of marijuana and meth is surging in California, in part because of crackdowns by the government in Mexico, said McGregor Scott, the former U.S. attorney in Sacramento who oversaw federal efforts to crack down on methamphetamine production.

Both drugs are prevalent in rural counties where law enforcement is limited and the task forces are most helpful. Scott described the proposed budget cuts as "a terrible mistake," saying they would severely limit the ability of law enforcement agencies to go after sophisticated drug traffickers.

"It's sort of a one-two punch, and the rural counties would suffer for it," said Scott, a Republican Bush-appointee who is now in private practice in Sacramento.

Mike Loyd heads one of the bureau's task forces in Imperial County, a sprawling, sparsely populated desert region that borders Mexico to the south and Arizona to the east. It is one of the country's major drug-trafficking corridors.

"What happens if these task forces close?," he said. "There's really nobody to fill the void."

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hLH788jRpuMwPHvXRkDBp9oa6yxQD9935NRG0
 
GOOD! Let those bastards know we do not care about their jobs as destroyers of liberty.
 
They should totally cut budgeting to the whole force, lay them all off, abolish these draconian drug laws and tax the sales of legally produced, unadulterated psychoactive drugs.
 
They should totally cut budgeting to the whole force, lay them all off, abolish these draconian drug laws and tax the sales of legally produced, unadulterated psychoactive drugs.

agree with all of the above, except the TAX part
 
State budget negotiators have proposed cutting $20 million from the Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement, on top of $12 million in previous cuts from the bureau.

Attorney General Jerry Brown, a Democrat whose department oversees the narcotics bureau, said the cuts would lead to layoffs for nearly a third of its 187 agents.
haha, good. You clowns sit around & eat mad doughnuts while my taxes pay for it & thats not flying anymore.
 
Joanmiro the only way in hell legalization will ever fly is if it is taxed. Look at the taxes on cigarettes and alcohol. How else can we expect the cost of medical treatment to be covered anyway?
 
California Budget Crisis Could Gut State Narcs; Drug Task Forces

Drug War Chronicle

07/10/2009


The latest version of the California state budget being considered by legislators in Sacramento would reduce the number of state Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement (BNE) agents to 100 and zero-out funding for 51 drug task forces funded by the agency. A decade ago, BNE fielded 400 agents. Cuts in recent years have reduced that number to 185 agents, and the latest budget proposals would slice that number nearly in half.

California is faced with a $26 billion budget deficit, state employees have been told to take three unpaid days of leave each month, the state is now issuing IOUs instead of cash payments to some vendors (and people expecting income tax refunds), and drastic cuts are already being administered to a wide variety of health, education, and welfare programs. But that doesn't stop the narcs from squealing.

"We realize everyone's going to take cuts," said Mike Lloyd, head of the Association of Special Agents. "But to have already cut us by 215 agents and turn around and cut us again this year by another 70 agents, which is 50 percent of our general fund budget, that's huge. There's no agency in the state that's taking that kind of hit," he told the Redding Searchlight.

The association met with legislators last week to try to reverse the cuts. The narcs argued that in additional to handling statewide drug enforcement, BNE also funds the local drug task forces. If BNE funding dries up, those task forces will go the way of the dodo bird, the narcs warned.

BNE has the support of California Attorney General Jerry Brown. "What the task forces do and what BNE does is they bring expertise and resources to stop drug-trafficking organizations that go beyond city and county lines," said Brown spokesman Scott Gerber. "They're the only bureau in the state that does that. They play a critical role."

If the BNE funding cuts actually occur, drug law enforcement will devolve back to local police forces and sheriff's departments, which are also cutting back because of budgetary pressures. The end result is likely to be less drug law enforcement, for better or worse. [Ed: Mostly for better.]

http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle...cuts_bureau_narcotics_enforcement_task_forces
 
TFA said:
"...There's no agency in the state that's taking that kind of hit"

HAHAHA that is what you think! Take a look around, lots of them are taking hits. Maybe you should, too. You might regret choosing that career with the truth you learn.
 
Im glad the Narcs are taking a hit!!!! Hopefully they and there families will suffer... bitter sweet justice!!!! The fuckheads who enforce our governments draconian drug laws deserve no sympathy :X
 
Haha, take that you scumbag bastards! I don't feel the least bit bad for these bringers of misery, I only hope it hits them a fraction as hard as life changing jail sentences have had on their countless victims.
 
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