Top Department Of Justice Award Recognizes Federal, State, Local Law Enforcement Efforts Along The “Heroin Highway”
PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Sixteen federal, state and local Rhode Island law enforcement agents and officers, and a federal prosecutor from the United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Rhode Island, were recognized today with a top Department of Justice award for their achievements significantly impacting the trafficking of heroin along the “Heroin Highway.” This notorious stretch of highway, running from I-195 East from Providence, R.I., to Cape Cod, Mass., has been used for many years to transport heroin to street level drug dealers and drug users.
Over the past two years, law enforcement agents and officers from the Drug Enforcement (DEA), the R.I. DEA Drug Task Force, Homeland Security Investigations, Rhode Island State Police, and the Providence, Warwick, East Providence, Newport, Pawtucket and Cranston Police Departments coordinated efforts and employed a variety of techniques to gather intelligence and information to identify heroin drug traffickers operating along the “Heroin Highway.” To date, “Operation Heroin Highway” has resulted in the arrest of 32 individuals, ranging from street level drug dealers to high level Mexican, Dominican and Guatemalan heroin traffickers. Law enforcement has seized more than 5 kilos of heroin, more than 6 kilos of cocaine and assets totaling at least $609,000.
It is believed that the individuals arrested during “Operation Heroin Highway” were supplying as much as 60% of the heroin being distributed along I-195 East from Providence to Cape Cod.
Today, in a ceremony at the United States Attorney’s Office in Providence, United States Attorney Peter F. Neronha; Associate Deputy Attorney General James H. Dinan, Director of the Department of Justice’s Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task (OCDETF); John J. Arvanitis, Special Agent in Charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s New England Field Division; and J. Michael Netherland, Deputy Special Agent in Charge of Homeland Security (HSI), recognized sixteen law enforcement officers and agents and a federal prosecutor by presenting each with the top 2012 New England Regional OCDETF award for outstanding contributions to cooperative law enforcement and to the OCDETF Program.
“Heroin destroys individuals, families and communities. DEA and our partners are committed to dismantling criminal organizations that attempt to flood our neighborhoods with heroin”, said DEA Special Agent in Charge John J. Arvanitis. “We congratulate these agents and officers and prosecutors recognized today for their hard work, dedication and selflessness. These enforcement successes are a direct result of the combined efforts of DEA, along with our state and local partners.”
United States Attorney Peter F. Neronha commented, “People ask, why do we continue this war on drugs? Because all - illegal drugs, and especially heroin, ruin people’s lives, and not only the lives of the people using them. They lay waste to human potential, and cause violent and other crime. As a result of the outstanding work of the agents, officers, and attorneys being honored today, the major source for heroin distribution in Rhode Island and southeastern Massachusetts has been significantly reduced. Law enforcement at its very best.”
"I commend all the federal, state and local law enforcement agents and officers for their tireless efforts to combat drug trafficking in our communities and for receiving this prestigious award," said J. Michael Netherland, Deputy Special Agent in Charge of HSI Boston. "These drug traffickers commit violent crimes and terrorize our neighborhoods. Disrupting and dismantling their activities is a top priority for HSI. As “Operation Heroin Highway” clearly demonstrates, we are committed to working with our law enforcement partners on this important task.”
The OCDETF Program was established in 1982 as a multi-agency, nationwide effort to pursue intelligence-driven, coordinated multi-jurisdictional investigations of criminal organizations trafficking drugs and laundering the illicit proceeds of crime. The OCDETF Program forms the centerpiece of the DOJ counter-narcotics strategy and is also the platform through which the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of the Treasury pursue complex drug and drug-related money laundering investigations. Through the OCDETF Program, these three Executive Departments use prosecutor-led, multi-agency task forces to combat high-priority national and international organized criminal organizations.
Recognized for their outstanding achievements during “Operation Heroin Highway” and to the OCDETF Program were:
DEA Special Agent Kevin Eaton
DEA Special Agent Dave Carnevale
DEA Special Agent Alex Koumanelis
DEA Special Agent James McCormack
DEA Special Agent Robyn Meletis
DEA Analyst Andrea Metz
DEA Drug Task Force Officer Dennis Smith, Pawtucket Police Department
DEA Drug Task Force Officer Mike Naylor, Newport Police Department
DEA Drug Task Force Officer Robert Page, Warwick Police Department
DEA Drug Task Force Officer Mike Masaitis, East Providence Police Department
DEA Drug Task Force Officer Juan Robles, Providence Police Department
DEA Drug Task Force Officer Dennis Fleming, Rhode Island State Police
Special Agent Michael Carvalho, Homeland Security Investigations
Det. Darren Ellinwood, East Providence Police Department
Sgt. Diogo Mello, East Providence Police Department
Lt. Russ Henry, Cranston Police Department