Army uses cocaine to recruit high school students

2006-12-21

Richard Moore

Original source URL:
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/121806A.shtml
http://www.azstarnet.com/sn/relatedstories/160717.php


Published: 12.17.2006

Tucson military recruiters ran cocaine
        Some kept visiting schools for 3 years after FBI caught them
        on tape
By Carol Ann Alaimo
ARIZONA DAILY STAR

A Midtown strip mall that should have housed the best of the best served as 
Corruption Central in Tucson.

Two military recruiting stations sit side-by-side there, one run by the Army, 
the other by the Marines. Between them, a total of seven recruiters were on the 
take, secretly accepting bribes to transport cocaine, even as most spent their 
days visiting local high schools.

They had help from several more recruiters at an Army National Guard office, 
where one recruiter was said to be selling cocaine from the trunk of his 
recruiting vehicle.

Together, these dozen or so recruiters formed the nucleus of one of the FBI's 
biggest public corruption cases, the sting known as Operation Lively Green, 
which unfolded in Southern Arizona from 2002-2004 and was made public last year.

Many of the drug-running recruiters remained on the job, with continued access 
to local schools, for months ‹ and often, years ‹ after FBI agents secretly 
filmed them counting cash next to stacks of cocaine bricks, the Arizona Daily 
Star found in a months-long probe of court records and military employment data.

Some were still recruiting three years after they first were caught on camera 
running drugs in uniform. Most have pleaded guilty and are to be sentenced in 
March. Some honorably retired from the military.

There is no suggestion in court records that the recruiters were providing drugs
to students.

What they did between FBI drug runs isn't known because they weren't under 
constant surveillance, the FBI said. For example, in the middle of the cocaine 
sting, one of the recruiters was arrested by another law-enforcement agency in 
an unrelated drug case, accused of transporting nearly 200 pounds of marijuana 
on Interstate 19, court records show.

Military recruiting officials say the corruption was not widespread. They also 
say they kept these recruiters on the job because they either didn't know they 
were under investigation, or were told by the FBI to leave the suspects alone so
as not to jeopardize the sting's outcome.

Some Tucson parents and school officials, contacted by the Star about the 
results of the paper's research, said students should not have been left exposed
for so long to recruiters known by the FBI to be involved in cocaine-running.

"I don't like the thought of someone involved with drugs having access to my 
child, and I don't know anything about it and the school doesn't know anything 
about it," said Kathy Janssen, who has a 15-year-old son at Tucson High Magnet 
School, the city's largest high school. "High school students are very 
vulnerable."

This isn't the first time the FBI has come under criticism in the Lively Green 
case. Allegations of sexual misconduct by undercover informants also have dogged
the case and could result in reduced punishment for the recruiters and dozens of
other defendants.

SCHOOLS

At a press conference to unveil the case last year, the FBI announced that many 
Lively Green defendants were military members. Agents didn't say that recruiters
were involved.

A Phoenix-based FBI spokeswoman said the agency can't say much at this point 
about the Lively Green probe because it's still in progress.

Special Agent Deb McCarley did say the FBI generally performs risk assessments 
before deciding to keep suspects who work in public positions on the job during 
undercover probes.

"We recognize the range of ethical issues that inherently arise in the course of
our undercover investigations," McCarley said in an e-mail.

"We have sound policies in place" to address such dilemmas, she said, and "this 
case has been no exception."

Some high schools in Tucson Unified, Flowing Wells Unified and Marana Unified 
school districts, and in Amphitheater Public Schools, were visited by one or 
more of these recruiters on a regular or occasional basis, according to military
recruiting officials. Schools in other districts may have had visits as well, 
but precise records no longer are available in some cases, officials said.

One TUSD Governing Board member was incensed to hear the recruiters remained on 
the job so long.

"It's ludicrous to me that the FBI would leave these people in place and allow 
them onto our high school campuses," Judy Burns said.

"If they were going to do that, they should have been monitoring them 
constantly."

Monica Young, who has two children attending TUSD high schools, agreed.

"It is appalling that recruiters who were known to be involved in such activity 
were allowed on any school campus," she said.

Legal expert Stephen Saltzburg, who teaches criminal procedure at George 
Washington University, said it's entirely possible that the Tucson recruiters 
were running drugs in their free time and still functioning normally on the job.

Once the FBI made the decision to leave them in place at local schools "one 
would hope they would be watching that very carefully," he said.

ETHICS

From a military standpoint, it's especially egregious that recruiters took part 
in the cocaine runs, experts say.

"The military definitely views recruiters as persons in a special position of 
trust," said Eugene Fidell, president of the National Institute of Military 
Justice, in Washington, D.C.

Recruiters are supposed to meet high standards to promote an honorable image of 
the military, Fidell said. If court-martialed, they probably would be punished 
more harshly than non-recruiters, he said.

The willingness of Tucson recruiters to run drugs was clear to FBI agents from 
the start of the Lively Green sting, according to agent testimony at the 
court-martial of a Davis-Monthan technical sergeant ‹ a non-recruiter ‹ 
convicted in the Lively Green case in June.

In fact, it was a recruiter who caused the FBI to set up the sting in the first 
place, FBI Special Agent Adam Radtke said.

That recruiter, Radtke said, was former Army National Guardsman Darius W. Perry,
who pleaded guilty Thursday in U.S. District Court.

Radtke said the sting got started in late 2001, when the FBI received numerous 
complaints that Perry, who worked out of the Guard's East Side recruiting 
office, was taking bribes to fix the military aptitude test scores of new 
recruits.

The FBI put an undercover informant in place to check it out. As the FBI plant 
was paying Perry to fix a test score in the parking lot of a Tucson restaurant, 
Perry opened the trunk of his recruiting vehicle and offered to sell part of a 
kilo of cocaine, Radtke said.

"Perry basically introduced the crime to us," the agent testified.

Perry couldn't be reached for comment. His federal court file, including the 
name of his attorney, has been sealed by the court. The Arizona Daily Star has 
filed a legal motion to have the case unsealed, and the action is pending.

Perry, 42, and another former Army National Guard recruiter, Mark A. Fillman, 
56, were the first to offer their drug-running services to undercover informants
who posed as Mexican drug lords during the sting, Radtke said.

The sting was set up so participants could make money in two ways ‹ by agreeing 
to help transport cocaine and by finding others to do so.

The Tucson recruiters, trained to sell people on the military, often used those 
skills to recruit for the drug ring, helping the sting to mushroom, court 
records show.

One Army recruiter, Rodney E. Mills, 40, brought in six people. Perry persuaded 
six others, all Army National Guard members, to join, his plea deal said.

In one case not mentioned in the plea agreement, Perry is said to have recruited
a Nogales woman named Leslie Hildago, then in her early 20s, to join the drug 
ring after he had recruited her to join the National Guard.

Hildago's lawyer, Richard Bacal of Tucson, said he is "not going to deny" that's
what took place, but said he can't elaborate because of the plea bargain Hildago
signed.

If recruiters used data from recruiting rolls to solicit people for drug 
running, that's particularly offensive, said military law expert Scott Silliman,
a former senior lawyer for the Air Force who now is a law professor at Duke 
University.

Such recruiters "took advantage of their positions to commit crime," Silliman 
said.

Another Tucson recruiter, former National Guard member Demian F. Castillo, 35, 
got his own younger brother ‹ John M. Castillo, 31, ‹ to join the drug ring, 
court records show.

The younger Castillo, a U.S. Customs and Border Protection port inspector, 
agreed to wave through two vehicles he believed were loaded with cocaine at the 
Mariposa Port of Entry in Nogales, in exchange for $19,000. He, too, pleaded 
guilty.

PROSECUTION

Of the more than 60 Lively Green defendants who have pleaded guilty so far, 10 
were Tucson military recruiters. Between the 10, they pocketed a total of 
$180,600 in bribe payments, court records show.

Five worked at the Army's Midtown recruiting office: Mills, Sheldon L. Anderson,
27; Derreck J. Curry, 30; Ronricco M. Allen, 36; and Jason E. Kitzmiller, 27.

Two Marine recruiters whose office was next door to the Army recruiters also 
pleaded guilty: James M. Clear, 26, and Jared A. Wright, 28.

National Guard recruiters who pleaded guilty include Perry, Fillman and 
Castillo. A fourth National Guard recruiter, Raul F. Portillo, 34, was 
identified by the FBI as a suspect but was never charged. Portillo is the 
recruiter arrested during the FBI sting by another police agency on marijuana 
trafficking charges. He is believed to have fled to Mexico.

In May, Perry retired honorably from the military, six months before the FBI 
arrested him. Fillman also retired honorably in May 2003, two years before he 
was charged.

In two cases, the Arizona Army National Guard gave suspected or convicted 
recruiters general discharges under "honorable" conditions.

One went to Castillo, the recruiter who brought his brother into the drug ring.

The lawyer for the Arizona Army National Guard, Col. Richard Palmatier, said 
Castillo resigned from the Guard a day before his guilty plea, which kept his 
personnel file free of information about the crime.

Portillo, the former recruiter believed to be in Mexico, also received a general
discharge under honorable conditions, even though he was wanted in Santa Cruz 
County ‹ and still is ‹ on the unrelated drug charges. Palmatier said Guard 
officials didn't know about those charges, and even if they had, Portillo wasn't
convicted so the case couldn't be used against him upon discharge.

Portillo was stopped on northbound I-19 in a vehicle filled with pot in July 
2003, and is thought to have left the country to escape prosecution, said Santa 
Cruz County Attorney George Silva. Portillo couldn't be reached for comment.

Silva was astonished to hear the National Guard gave Portillo a military 
discharge that includes the word "honorable."

"That is shocking. It's absolutely amazing," he said.
WHAT NOW

What happens next with the recruiters and other Lively Green defendants is in 
the court's hands.

Each defendant who pleaded guilty faces the possibility of up to five years in 
prison. But all have signed plea bargains that say their sentences will be 
determined by their willingness to cooperate with prosecutors and testify 
against others, if needed.

In their plea deals, none of the defendants was charged with drug trafficking, 
which has higher potential penalties. Instead, they were charged with bribery, 
conspiracy and extortion for the cash they accepted.

How much prison time they get ‹ if any ‹ also may be influenced by the 
allegations of misconduct that have surfaced in the Lively Green probe.

The complete extent of misconduct has never been publicly revealed, but 
according to witness testimony at the D-M court-martial in June, there was an 
incident in October 2002 in which informants posing as drug dealers hired 
hookers after a drug run to a Las Vegas hotel.

The FBI informant paid the prostitutes to have sex with several men who later 
became defendants, witnesses said.

At one point, they said, a prostitute who was drunk and high appeared to pass 
out and one of the FBI informants performed lewd acts over the woman's face 
while someone else took photographs.

The informant involved later destroyed the photos, said the defense lawyer in 
the D-M court-martial case.

A Tucson lawyer and former federal prosecutor said it's "absolutely probable" 
that Lively Green defendants will get a break on their sentences because of the 
misconduct.

"Any time you have credible allegations of misconduct, it is going to impact the
resolution of a case," said A. Bates Butler III, who prosecuted drug cases and 
other federal cases from 1977 to 1981 as U.S. attorney for the District of 
Arizona.

"Jurors don't like misconduct," Bates said, so prosecutors sometimes will try to
salvage such cases by offering plea deals to lesser charges so the cases don't 
get to trial.

Military recruiting officials said they removed the corrupt recruiters once they
learned of the crimes, or when they got the go-ahead from the FBI to do so.

"We suspended the soldiers from recruiting duties as soon as we were notified of
their involvement," which often was the same day they pleaded guilty, said 
Douglas Smith, a spokesman for Army Recruiting Command at Fort Knox, Ky.

Military officials say the criminal acts of Tucson's recruiters are regrettable 
but not the norm.

"Allegations of recruiter misconduct are rare," considering the thousands of 
recruiters on the job nationwide, said Janice Hagar, a Marine Corps recruiting 
spokeswoman. "This was an isolated incident."

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