Report Details DEA, Amtrak Deal

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The420Guy

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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) -- The local Amtrak office provides federal drug
agents with details about suspect passengers, and Amtrak police get 10
percent of any cash agents seize from arrested drug couriers, the
Albuquerque Journal reported Wednesday.

A computer linked to Amtrak's ticketing terminal sits on a desk at the local
branch of the Drug Enforcement Administration, in what officials describe as
a one-of-a-kind arrangement, according to the newspaper.

Through it, federal agents can learn passenger names, points of origin,
destinations and where, when and how the tickets were bought.

The information helps determine which passengers will be questioned -- and
whose luggage will be checked by a drug-sniffing dog -- aboard trains
stopping in Albuquerque.

Tips are passed ''all over the country,'' DEA Agent Kevin Small said.

In a brief e-mail to the Journal, a company spokeswoman acknowledged that
Amtrak ''will, upon request, participate in and provide information for law
enforcement investigations.''

The computer, she added, belongs to an Amtrak investigator who is a
deputized member of the DEA task force.

Debbie Hare, a spokeswoman for Amtrak, told The Associated Press on
Wednesday that under federal guidelines, any assets acquired by Amtrak are
returned to law-enforcement efforts.

Steven Derr, assistant director of the local DEA office, did not know how
many arrests had been made or how much money had been seized although both
figures were substantial.

''And, our agreement is: Anything we seize off the train, they get 10
percent,'' Small said.

Peter Simonson, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of
New Mexico, called the deal ''an insidious alliance'' and said the group
might challenge the practice in court.

Derr defended the arrangement.

''I don't consider that to be an invasion of privacy,'' he said. ''The whole
idea of why we do it this way is so we're not randomly stopping people.''

But Albuquerque defense lawyer Randi McGinn called it a manipulation of the
Fourth Amendment of the Constitution, which protects citizens from
unreasonable search and seizure by the government.

McGinn added that it singles out the poor who rarely use credit cards.

Derr said searches weren't limited to passengers who paid cash for
last-minute one-way tickets, because credit card purchases made just before
departure sometimes raised suspicions as well.


from the dildo-infested cubicle of
Ashley "The Fearless" Kennedy
 
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