A massive Methamphetamine bust went down in Georgia recently. Close to 50 people were charged. GG2.net reports:
Around 50 Indian American convenience store owners and employees have been arrested, in Georgia, and charged with selling substances used in the illegal manufacture of methamphetamine (meth), a highly addictive stimulant.
An indictment unveiled in a US magistrateÂ’s court, on Monday, said the arrests were made in six Georgia counties over the past month under an operation to hunt down peddlers of meth ingredients. Several of those arrested have been released on bonds ranging from $10,000 to $50,000.
Some of the defence attorneys have accused the investigators of targeting immigrant merchants, most of them of Indian origin. Attorney Steven Sadow, who is representing six defendants, said he will investigate if officials singled out Indians in their “Operation Meth Merchant”.
“I want to know why they went after the Indians to begin with,” said Sadow. He proposes to file a motion to “dismiss all charges based on selective prosecution”. One of the defendants also asserted that the charges stemmed from stereotyping and generalisation.
A list of defendants can be read in the DOJ release. There are a lot of Patels up in there. It doesn’t immediately strike me as “selective prosecution.” I mean Indians do own a lot of convenience stores, and convenience stores do sell drugs. Of course a quick news brief doesn’t give the full story, especially the “convenience store demographics” of the area.
The Walker County Messenger has more:
“We went where the evidence led for all the stores,” said David Nahmias, U.S. attorney for Georgia’s Northern District, at a news conference last Friday afternoon. “The problem is not limited to these 25 stores.”
Of the 49 people indicted in the operation, 43 are of Indian descent.
Patrick Crosby, public affairs officer for the U.S. attorneyÂ’s office, reiterated Nahmias comments.
“We weren’t going after Patels, and just like the U.S. attorney (Nahmias) said, we didn’t know who these people were when we started,” Crosby said. “We just followed the evidence.”
MSNBC has more detailed coverage.
Ummm… not. How about Gita 3:24
naitat samacarej jatu manasapi hy anisvarah vinasyaty acaran maudhyad yatha Â’rudro Â’bdhi-jam visam
isvaranam vacah satyam tathaivacaritam kvacit tesam yat sva-vaco-yuktam buddhimams tat samacaret
“One should simply follow the instructions of the Lord and His empowered servants. Their instructions are all good for us, and any intelligent person will perform them as instructed. However, one should guard against trying to imitate their actions. One should not try to drink the ocean of poison in imitation of Lord Siva.”
We should always consider the position of the isvaras, or those who can actually control the movements of the sun and moon, as superior. Without such power, one cannot imitate the isvaras, who are superpowerful. Lord Siva drank poison to the extent of swallowing an ocean, but if any common man tries to drink even a fragment of such poison, he will be killed. There are many pseudo devotees of Lord Siva who want to indulge in smoking ganja (marijuana) and similar intoxicating drugs, forgetting that by so imitating the acts of Lord Siva they are calling death very near. Similarly, there are some pseudo devotees of Lord Krsna who prefer to imitate the Lord in His rasa-lila, or dance of love, forgetting their inability to lift Govardhana Hill. It is best, therefore, that one not try to imitate the powerful, but simply follow their instructions; nor should one try to occupy their posts without qualification. There are so many “incarnations” of God without the power of the Supreme Godhead.
I am involved in the case. It appears that the “informant” was a jailbird cutting a deal for himself.
At least some of the store clerks were cautious and selling only the legal limit of the items that can be used to manufacture meth. The grocery list is quite extensive. If the informant muttered “I’m going to cook some meth,” then I doubt if many understood what he was talking about.
Local With Knowledge (I like your handle, btw :), can you tell us where we can find out more? Do you know more?
I’m curious about how this all actually played out (as opposed to what the government’s saying so far and what hte media is inexplicably largely regurgitating).
-s
Looks like the sceptics were right after all.
Cultural Differences Complicate a Georgia Drug Sting Operation
There have been three persons of Indian descent now that have been misidentified, according to a local attorney who is one county away from me. He represented the woman Malvika Patel and now represents a man allegedly in my county who was also misidentified. He was in New York working at a sandwich shop when they said he was in Georgia selling components of methamphetamine. On the news it was being said that a lot was being assumed about what these clerks “knew”.
Poorly cited and unsupported statistics are probably the #1 cause of terrorism and other bad things.
I think that anybody that would ever do meth is retarted cause it just wastes there time. I have seen to many people almost die an one of them is my cuz an the reason i say that is because he got up to 70 pounds an he is two months older than me an i turn 16 in may now thats BAD YOU TELL ME IF IT ANT
I know there was an interesting thread on the topic of the South Asian convenience store merchants who were rounded up in June 2005. I thought those who wrote in would be interested in this statement which came out today. (By the way, 75% of convenience stores in North Georgia are owned by whites, which does suggest racial profiling here…) There’s actions you can take if you think so too…
Stop the Racially Targeted Prosecutions of South Asian Merchants in Operation Meth Merchant
The Racial Justice Campaign Against Operation Meth Merchant will be holding a press event at the Asian American Convenience Stores Association (778 Dekalb Industrial Way, Decatur, GA) on Sunday, January 8, 2006 at 1:30 pm to protest the U.S. DEA’s unlawful and unfair targeting of South Asian convenience store owners.
Operation Meth Merchant is the name given by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency to their latest effort in the federal government’s crack down on communities of color as part of this country’s War on Drugs. In northwest Georgia in July, a dozen, mostly white, English-speaking informants convicted of possessing, producing, and selling an illegal drug called methamphetamine (meth) were promised reductions in their prison sentences if they assisted with successful prosecutions of store clerks from whom they bought the ingredients to create meth.
The racial targeting of South Asians and prosecutorial blunders in this operation are outrageous. Even though the majority of convenience store owners in the area are white, the prosecutions and informants specifically targeted the Indian community. Forty-four of the forty-nine people indicted are South Asian, and thirty-three of them have the last name Patel. At least one of these confidential informants has a history of fraud convictions. A couple of the cases have been dropped because an informant obviously misidentified the store clerks.
The DEA (Drug Enforcement Agency) either targeted these stores or they’re just incompetent, said Dan Horowitz de Garcia, an organizer with Communities United for Action, Power & Justice, a state criminal justice coalition. During this time, Wal-Mart, Sam’s Club, and Costco all were selling charcoal and cold medicine in large quantities. It’s clear the agency wasn’t trying to stop meth production–they were trying to get easy convictions.
The store clerks and shop owners, many of whom do not speak fluent English, were indicted for allegedly knowing that the products they were selling would be used to create meth. Meth is a highly addictive stimulant that can be made using everyday, legal household products such as Sudafed, Tylenol Cold capsules, and Max Brand Pseudo 60s. These medicines are legal, over-the-counter products that are bought all over the country.
Those indicted are not only facing up to 25 years in prison, forfeiture of their stores and fines of up to $250,000, they are likely to be deported as well. U.S. immigration laws allow deportation of people convicted of drug-related crimes, despite their ties to the community, American-born children with U.S. citizenship, or long-time residency in this country. Based on questionable evidence, these prosecutions are tearing families apart and doing nothing to stop the meth problem in Georgia. My mom, wife, and everybody are just crying all day long, said one of the merchants affected. I cannot even sleep. I have been on house arrest for 7 months. I feel so terrible…. I don’t have the income to pay all these [fines]…. They just hate us. Since the early 1980’s, the United States’ rate of incarceration has grown exponentially. We now have the world’s largest prison population, with 2.1 million people behind bars, 1/3 of whom are there for nonviolent drug-related offenses. This number represents more people behind bars than all the European nations combined. Numerically, the majority of people that use and sell drugs are white, yet the vast majority of people convicted and incarcerated for drug-related offenses are people of color.
The War on Drugs has been devastating the most marginalized communities for years, said Priyanka Sinha, a staff person with Raksha, an organization based in Atlanta that provides a range of services for the South Asian community. Black communities, poor communities have all been hit hard. We know we have to fight back or the same will happen here.
The Asian American Convenience Store Association (AACSA), Communities United for Action, Power & Justice, Queer Progressive Agenda (QPA), Raksha, South Asian American Leaders of Tomorrow (SAALT), and the Southern Center for Human Rights (SCHR) have formed a coalition called The Racial Justice Campaign Against Operation Meth Merchant to stop the unlawful and unjust prosecutions of South Asian convenience store owners in North Georgia.Upendra Patel, a coalition member from AACSA, says The South Asian community stands united with allies to speak out against the racially biased enforcement of drug laws and the unfair targeting of our community members. It is time for the government’s lawyers to do the right thing and drop the prosecutions.
The Racial Justice Campaign Against Operation Meth Merchant is mobilizing to stop these racially targeted prosecutions. Many of the people arrested will be in court on Tuesday, January 10, 2006. The coalition will be holding a press event at Asian American Convenience Stores Association (778 Dekalb Industrial Way, Decatur, GA) on Sunday, January 8, 2006 at 1:30 pm to protest the U.S. DEA’s unlawful and unfair targeting of South Asian convenience store owners. In addition, the campaign is organizing support for the court date.
People in the community need to know they aren’t alone, said Sinha. We are mobilizing the South Asian community as well as all communities concerned with justice across Georgia. We won’t take this lying down.
Take Action!
don’t forget to sign the petition:
http://www.petitiononline.com/stopomm/petition.html
I had heard the story with the Finishing up a Cook line as well, so the most recently posted version is the one I read.
I agree that most people wouldnÂ’t have a clue what finishing up a cook means
It is also interesting that Indians especially in the South are pro Republican, there is nothing like a few unwarranted arrests to suddenly alert everyone to the value of the Bill of Rights.
We can run ads in the Indian papers, Bill of Rights, not just a liberal nuisance ya know.
Sorry about that, hehehheheheh.
It looks quite clearly that many of these are unwarranted prosecutions, but it also raises larger questions, like are convenience store clerks supposed to be law enforcement people and what is their response supposed to be when perfectly ordinary household items are being purchased.
The fact that it is an Indian community makes it all the more interesting, it’s not exactly Billy the Kidd or Bonnie and Clyde we are talking about.
IÂ’ll be following it closely and I will sign the petitition.
Desi Dikri, ciao for now yall.
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