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Drug raids in Puerto Rico target rural areas
The Associated Press
Wednesday, August 27th 2008, 4:00 AM
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico Federal agents arrested 59 alleged members of a drug trafficking ring Monday in coordinated raids in small-town Puerto Rico, where some housing projects are under siege by gangsters.
The early-morning raids targeted housing projects in the mountain towns of Cayey, Coamo, Jayuya and Santa Isabel and the coastal enclaves of Guayama and Salinas.
The raids were carried out by the FBI, Drug Enforcement Administration, National Guard and local police.
"The outlying towns and cities of Puerto Rico, like Cayey, are no longer sheltered from drug trafficking, gangs and violent crime," said Luis Fraticelli, chief of the FBI in the U.S. island territory.
Fraticelli said the arrested suspects included suppliers and enforcers. The trafficking group's alleged leader, Ismael Vazquez Larrauri, was still at large.
A grand jury indictment alleges the Puerto Rican gang distributed heroin, cocaine, marijuana, and prescription drugs in housing projects in the six rural areas.
Manuel Oyola Torres, chief of the island's U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, said the spread of the drug scourge into Puerto Rico's small towns can be attributed partly to recent improvements in roads leading from urban centers to the countryside.
Officials say Puerto Rico's problems with drug crime began in the mid-1980s, when drug traffickers, hurt by U.S. efforts to cut off the flow of drugs to Florida and the Bahamas, began smuggling through Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
Raids on drug trafficking centers in Puerto Rico then pushed drug gangs into other areas, setting off fighting between rival gangs and causing the homicide rate to soar.
Puerto Rico, home to nearly 4 million people, has a homicide rate more than three times the U.S. national average.
Authorities say drug trafficking is behind the majority of the killings.
The Associated Press
Wednesday, August 27th 2008, 4:00 AM
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico Federal agents arrested 59 alleged members of a drug trafficking ring Monday in coordinated raids in small-town Puerto Rico, where some housing projects are under siege by gangsters.
The early-morning raids targeted housing projects in the mountain towns of Cayey, Coamo, Jayuya and Santa Isabel and the coastal enclaves of Guayama and Salinas.
The raids were carried out by the FBI, Drug Enforcement Administration, National Guard and local police.
"The outlying towns and cities of Puerto Rico, like Cayey, are no longer sheltered from drug trafficking, gangs and violent crime," said Luis Fraticelli, chief of the FBI in the U.S. island territory.
Fraticelli said the arrested suspects included suppliers and enforcers. The trafficking group's alleged leader, Ismael Vazquez Larrauri, was still at large.
A grand jury indictment alleges the Puerto Rican gang distributed heroin, cocaine, marijuana, and prescription drugs in housing projects in the six rural areas.
Manuel Oyola Torres, chief of the island's U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, said the spread of the drug scourge into Puerto Rico's small towns can be attributed partly to recent improvements in roads leading from urban centers to the countryside.
Officials say Puerto Rico's problems with drug crime began in the mid-1980s, when drug traffickers, hurt by U.S. efforts to cut off the flow of drugs to Florida and the Bahamas, began smuggling through Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
Raids on drug trafficking centers in Puerto Rico then pushed drug gangs into other areas, setting off fighting between rival gangs and causing the homicide rate to soar.
Puerto Rico, home to nearly 4 million people, has a homicide rate more than three times the U.S. national average.
Authorities say drug trafficking is behind the majority of the killings.