Thursday, September 27, 2007

Feds: Man reported his lost cocaine

Federal agents thought there was something fishy about Leroy Carr.

On four occasions since last December, Carr either crossed the Canadian border or was found near it with thousands of dollars in cash, according to a complaint filed in U.S. District Court. He also sometimes carried night vision goggles and a GPS device programmed with coordinates for a well-known drug-smuggling trail.

But Carr refused to speak with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, and they let him go — until he called to ask if they had seen his cocaine.

According to the complaint, he told agents that on Aug. 3, he had stashed two blue backpacks containing 68 pounds of cocaine by the entrance to a Boy Scout camp near the Canadian border. When he returned the next day, they were gone, he said.

Carr, of suburban Federal Way, asked if ICE could put out a news release saying that federal agents had seized the drugs. That way, according to the complaint, the organization he was working for would believe his statements that he hadn't stolen them.

Two weeks later, a Boy Scout ranger found the backpacks, which were dry and in good shape, and called police.

Carr was arrested last weekend on a federal charge of cocaine possession with intent to distribute. He made his initial appearance in U.S. District Court in Seattle on Monday and is scheduled for a detention hearing Thursday.

Actually this type of situation is neither funny nor uncommon. More times than I can remember individuals have contacted me asking for help in establishing that ICE (formerly Customs), DEA or FBI agents had seized drugs or money from them. You see, occationally government agents make a seizure without making an arrest.

In situations where a seizure has taken place but no arrest occurs there is no court record confirming the seizure. Without proof of a seizure the poor schnook to whom the drugs and/or money was entrusted is on the hook to the person who fronted it to him/her for the value of what was seized. Hence you can understand Mr. Carr's predicament and why, probably in desperation, he went to the unusual step of reporting the loss of the cocaine he was transporting.

Sometimes there is a way to verify that a seizure has actually taken place, other times not. Without verification the person who lost the load is in deeper sh*t than if he was arrested and charged. Except, of course, Mr. Carr, who is likely still on the hook for misplacing the cocaine and in jail because of his damning admissions.