Miami Herald

Ruling threatens U.S. power as world’s high-seas drug police

- BY JOSHUA GOODMAN

A little-noticed federal appeals court ruling this year threatens a key weapon in the United States’ war on drugs: A decadesold law that gives the U.S. broad authority to make high-seas arrests anywhere in the world, even if the drugs aren’t bound for American shores.

It’s a law that’s used to round up and imprison hundreds of foreigners every year, mostly poor, semi-literate fishermen from Central and South America who make up the drug trade’s lowest rungs.

“It is a waste of U.S. taxpayer dollars to have these costly misadventu­res as we play drug police to the world,” said Eric Vos, head of the public defender’s office in Puerto Rico that brought the court challenge.

At issue is the Maritime Drug Law Enforcemen­t Act, which defines drug smuggling in internatio­nal waters as a crime against the United States and gives the U.S. unique arrest powers anywhere on the seas — whenever it determines a vessel is “without nationalit­y.”

But how a vessel is deemed stateless sometimes gets messy.

The was the case for the Costa Rican plaintiff Jeffri

Davila-Reyes, whose appeal prompted the ruling. The Coast Guard chased down his speedboat in the western Caribbean in 2015 as he and two cousins were allegedly transporti­ng five to 15 kilos of cocaine.

They identified their vessel as hailing from Costa Rica, according to the FBI’s summary of the investigat­ion, but they lacked any documentat­ion.

When the U.S. asked the Costa Rican government to confirm the vessel’s registry, it responded 12 weeks after the bust that it could neither confirm nor refute the claim.

A few weeks later the men were charged and eventually pleaded guilty to

possessing narcotics “on board a vessel subject to the jurisdicti­on of the United States.”

But a three-judge panel of the First Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston ruled in January that one of the law’s provisions — disavowing a captain’s claim of nationalit­y — were an unconstitu­tional extension of U.S. policing powers beyond America’s borders.

Tellingly, almost none of those arrested under the law had ever set foot in the U.S. nor were they charged with trying to import cocaine. In Davila-Reyes’ case, the cocaine he was accused of transporti­ng was purportedl­y headed to Jamaica.

Despite the ruling that threw out his conviction, Davila-Reyes remains behind bars seven years into a 10-year sentence as the Justice Department seeks reconsider­ation by all of the First Circuit’s nine judges.

In a series of recent letters to The Associated Press from federal prison,

Davila-Reyes reflected on how he only got involved in smuggling as a way to escape poverty in his homeland after years of handbliste­ring constructi­on work for $10 a day. He said taking a chance on smuggling offered him $6,000.

“Nobody can be blamed for being born poor,” he wrote.

From the moment President Richard Nixon declared “war on drugs” in 1971, the U.S. Coast Guard has been at the forefront of the campaign to stop illegal narcotics from entering the United States.

Today, it spends more than $2 billion annually as part of that effort. But, almost from the start, that goal has proven elusive.

Cocaine prices, a gauge of supply, have been hovering at historical lows for more than a decade as cocaine production from Colombia has soared to record highs. In a good year, barely 10% of cocaine shipments in the waters off Central and South America — where the bulk of the world’s cocaine is trafficked — are actually seized or destroyed, according to the U.S. government’s own estimates.

Despite that poor record, U.S. officials continue to tout their success at sea. A 2020 Coast Guard report said at-sea interdicti­ons are the most effective way to combat cartels and criminal networks. Since 2017, the amount of cocaine it has seized or destroyed exceeds 959 metric tons.

Prosecutio­ns under the Maritime Drug Law Enforcemen­t Act exploded last year to 296 — nearly five times the number a decade ago, according to Syracuse University’s Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use, which collects Justice Department data. But since each case involves multiple defendants, the actual number of foreigners detained at sea last year was 635 — the highest tally since 2017.

Critics of U.S. drug policy say most such smugglers fell into the job because of poverty and are hardly worth locking up for so long when legions of their poor compatriot­s stand ready to take their place.

“These are not mastermind­s like Pablo Escobar or Chapo Guzman,” said Kendra McSweeney, an Ohio State University geographer who has spent years researchin­g U.S. drug policies.

Neither the Coast Guard nor Justice Department would comment on DavilaReye­s’ appeal but experts say it’s too early to judge the fallout from the landmark ruling.

Currently Vos’ office in Puerto Rico is preparing 14 motions for dismissal in other boat cases on behalf of jailed defendants from Colombia, Venezuela and the Dominican Republic. The ruling has also been cited in at least five proceeding­s outside the First Circuit.

“It’s definitely a chink in the armor,” said Roger Cabrera, a court-appointed attorney in Miami seeking who has filed one of the appeals. “But like most chinks, I’m sure the federal government is already looking for a workaround.”

For now, U.S. law enforcemen­t continues to conduct regular search and seizures on the high seas with little indication of concern.

In court filings, attorneys for the U.S. government have argued in part that holding up interdicti­ons to wait for an unequivoca­l denial of registry from a foreign nation before declaring a vessel stateless would be impractica­l.

“Anyone involved with bringing dangerous drugs into the United States will be held accountabl­e, no matter their position in the drug-distributi­on network,” said Justice Department spokeswoma­n Nicole Navas Oxman.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL AP ?? The U.S. Coast Guard and other law enforcemen­t agencies displayed more than $1 billion worth of seized cocaine and marijuana aboard Coast Guard Cutter James at Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale in February. The Coast Guard said the haul included approximat­ely 54,500 pounds of cocaine and 15,800 pounds of marijuana from multiple interdicti­ons in the Caribbean Sea and the eastern Pacific.
REBECCA BLACKWELL AP The U.S. Coast Guard and other law enforcemen­t agencies displayed more than $1 billion worth of seized cocaine and marijuana aboard Coast Guard Cutter James at Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale in February. The Coast Guard said the haul included approximat­ely 54,500 pounds of cocaine and 15,800 pounds of marijuana from multiple interdicti­ons in the Caribbean Sea and the eastern Pacific.

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