Coincidentally, between 1987-2002, I lived in Key Largo, FL, which used to be a sleepy village till the mid-Nineties. Key Largo, FL is an hour away from Miami, FL, a city author Steve Bentley mentions seven times in his book.
Living in the Florida Keys in the eighties, one learned quickly. If one spotted a 30+ feet cigarette boat in a tiny, maybe even shabby marina, one did not step closer to have one’s picture taken with that boat. The issue was obvious. What kind of “proud owner of such a vessel” would moor(hide) their boat, away from the flashy, rich marinas?
In contrast, Steve Bentley, author of “Undercover: Operation Julie - The Inside Story” would have tried to get invited onto such a boat. Because, in the late-seventies, Steve Bentley was a young British cop, hungry to make a name for himself and fight the fight of the good guys.
His setting is similar, only it plays out in the UK. The drug dealers are hiding in sleepy villages like Carno and Llanddewi Brefi, surrounded by “... fields, cattle and the sky above.” Logically, in these small communities, everybody knows everybody and “people see things”; just popping up and observing things “Miami Vice”-style won’t work. Infiltrating a drug dealer circle is not easy. Bentley grows a scruffy beard and he ain’t wearing a Versace jacket (as in Miami Vice) because drug dealers aren’t stupid.
Most fascinating to me was that apparently, at the time (1976-1980), in Great Britain, there was no training, no manual, no action plan how to go about uncovering drug dealers’ activities; basically, Steve Bentley and his friend Eric Wright (w/ fake identities: Steve Jackson and Eric Walker) invent the procedures, tricks, and safety measures on the fly.
The involvement is immense because it has to be. Fighting the fight of the good guys becomes “Steve Jackson’s and Eric Walker’s” real life. Frequently, they experience heart-stopping situations. What does one do when a drug dealer asks, “What’s the scam” and C'mon you can tell me. You're cops, right?” – Choosing the right response might be a matter of life or death.
Bentley’s book also reads like the history of Rock-n-Roll from that era, “... Rolling Stones, Beatles, Eric Clapton, Keith Richards - all those guys are serious coke heads. They need quality powder...”
The drug dealers’ plan’s don’t stop in the UK.
“... Blue added, “The south of France too.” “Excuse me!” Bill went red in the face and I could see that he had puffed out his cheeks. “Bill, it's the jet-set scene there. Millionaires, big yachts - the whole scene. Like a French Miami. We gotta get our cocaine into there too.”...”
And, what about Nassau, Barbados, Antigua, Argentina, Panama, Miami, Georgetown Guyana and Vancouver Island?
Readers need to remember that all of this plays out at a time when the telephone was the main form of communication. Google was not even a dream yet. To get the information Bentley and Wright give their best. Still, “... as in November 1976 we were not sure where the acid manufacturing laboratory was...” And, the life style takes its toll. Especially, the drinking and the living the lie.
But, while Operation Julie is a huge success (break-up of one of the largest LSD manufacturing operations in the world) there is no real plan how the careers of Steve Bentley and Eric Wright are going to continue. Bentley is destined to become a Criminal Investigation Department officer in Tadley, another small city, “... a far cry from my recent undercover days in Wales. I was slowly going mad!” Failed marriages, drinking, and depression follow.
Bentley’s firsthand account reminded me of reports and stories of the Vietnam veterans who came home and were forced to rediscover a world they had not lived in for a long time. The shame of this particular story is that the British government did not have to accommodate the needs of tens of thousands of soldiers but basically only a few men, and they failed even at that.
“... I am now over the bitter disappointment of not receiving any kind of official recognition. Or am I? I believed I was...
“In retrospect, I believe it was one factor behind my depressive illness. There are few things worse than making sacrifices and endangering your health and then not being recognised...”
Bentley also muses about another failure of the British government – the loss of talent. These men had skills, hence, they should have taught the next generation of drug hunters instead of being chosen for a career as a village cop.
“Undercover: Operation Julie - The Inside Story” is a fascinating read that tells how the War on Drugs started, a portrait of the era, and the story of a man who was gave his best, ended up having depression and fought his way out of it.
5 stars,
Gisela Hausmann, author & blogger