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Showing posts with label black tar heroine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black tar heroine. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Oaxacan Indian Clan Operated Heroine Ring

Police arrest 48 suspects, members of a Oaxacan Indian clan, who allegedly brought the drugs in from Mexico, selling 15 to 20 pounds a week to gangs in East Los Angeles.

By Sam Quinones and Richard Winton March 25, 2009

For two decades, a Oaxacan Indian family allegedly ran an international drug ring that smuggled heroin through Tijuana into Southern California, generating millions of dollars in profit that returned to Mexico.And authorities said they did it undeterred by keeping it simple.

Family members lived humbly, with underlings distributing the drugs in open view at parking lots of 99 Cents stores, Food 4 Less supermarkets, Home Depots and McDonald's restaurants.

  • At these bustling locations, men inconspicuously trading brown shopping bags filled with heroin didn't seem out of place.
  • They communicated using an Indian language from their home village -- initially stumping investigators who listened to their exchanges on wiretaps.

"The language -- that stalled us," said Larry Zimmerman, the L.A. County Sheriff's Department's lead detective on the case.

They finally identified it as Mixteco Bajo, one of the main Indian languages in the state of Oaxaca, and brought in an interpreter.

On Tuesday, federal and local authorities arrested 48 members of the Mendoza family in raids at 38 residences and businesses that began before dawn and lasted into the afternoon.

  • The Mendoza clan allegedly sold 15 to 20 pounds of heroin every week -- generating roughly $2 million a month in profits.
  • Much of the money was sent back to Mexico, authorities said.
  • The arrest offers a window into how heroin from Mexico makes its way north and into Southern California -- relying largely on a network strengthened by family ties. It shows "how heroin initially controlled by [Mexican] drug cartels makes its way into the U.S., into the hands of gang members across the Los Angeles region," U.S. Atty. Thomas P. O'Brien said.

O'Brien said the defendants in the case were indicted on charges of conspiracy to possess and distribute heroin, among other charges.

If convicted, they face 10 years to life in federal prison.

The federal indictment of the Mendoza clan showed that the group shunned the ostentatious trappings normally associated with high-end drug traffickers.

  • The clan allegedly used Ford, Honda and Pontiac vehicles. They stored the heroin in the cars -- hiding it in engine blocks, gas tanks, steering columns, air vents and dashboards.
  • Despite the hefty drug profits, family members lived in modest homes in suburbs such as Montebello.
  • The seven-month investigation centered around Ramon Narciso Morales-Mendoza, the alleged clan leader.

Earlier this year, detectives found $10,500 hidden in the compartment of his car designed to hold the air bag, according to a federal affidavit. (He and other family members could not be reached for comment Tuesday).

On wiretaps, members of the Mendoza clan referred to the drug as "salsa," "burrito," "taco" and "shirts."

  • In safe houses, including one in the city of Commerce, the smugglers would cut the black-tar heroin with lactose using a coffee grinder, according to the affidavit.
  • Clan members would then break the heroin into quarter-gram amounts and place them in small multi-colored balloons and bunch them together in large plastic or paper bags.
  • The bags were then distributed to 11 street gangs, mostly in the East Los Angeles area, and other vendors.
  • The gang members would sell the heroin to users from San Diego to Santa Barbara, according to the federal affidavit.

Each week, the network's heroin was broken down into about 150,000 street doses, officials said."That's enough to supply thousands of people every week," said Tim Landrum, agent in charge of the Los Angeles office of the Drug Enforcement Administration.

At times, the network provided Christmas bonuses in the form of free heroin to those who sold for them, authorities said.

"One customer we arrested came from Santa Barbara," Zimmerman said. "He said it's the best heroin there is. He'd buy a balloon for $5 in L.A. and sell it for $40 in Santa Barbara."

The investigation of the Mendoza clan began last fall, when Sheriff's Department detectives started looking into heroin sales among street gangs in East Los Angeles.

That led to the Mendoza clan, and its six alleged distribution networks.

The family allegedly smuggled the heroin through Tijuana in vehicles.

Authorities said they were working to identify whether the family processed the heroin itself, or bought it and smuggled it, and what routes they took to get it to the border.

They declined to identify the town where the Mendoza family originated, saying they were working with Mexican authorities, and the case was still under investigation.

The DEA, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, among others, were involved in the investigation.

Tuesday's raids stunned members of the local Oaxacan Indian community, where drug use and gang membership is uncommon and widely disdained.

"I'm just shocked, to be quite honest with you," said Felipe Lopez, a Oaxacan Indian immigrant and Cal State Los Angeles professor, who teaches classes on Mexican Indian migration to the United States.

Oaxaca is a mountainous state in southern Mexico, 2,500 miles from the border and home to 16 separate Indian tribes. Many Oaxacan Indians have immigrated to California in the last 25 years, with the largest population concentrated in the San Joaquin Valley, near Fresno, where most are farmworkers.

This week's arrests came amid a harrowing drug war in Mexico among cartels that have used the proceeds of drug sales in the United States to continue their violence.

"This shuts down a major pipeline for the drug cartels," said L.A. County Sheriff Lee Baca.sam.quinones@latimes.com

The Rest @ the LA Times

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

National Drug Intelligence Center Report About Dallas

Major Markets
The North Texas HIDTA region includes two major drug markets: Dallas/Fort Worth and Oklahoma City. These cities constitute the most significant areas of drug trafficking and abuse in the HIDTA region. Dallas/Fort Worth is a primary drug distribution and transshipment center, while Oklahoma City generally serves as a transshipment center because of its location along several of the busiest drug transportation routes in the country.

Dallas/Fort Worth Market Overview

Dallas/Fort Worth's role as a leading distribution and transshipment center presents numerous challenges to local law enforcement officials.

  • Mexican DTOs have established operational cells within the metropolitan area that supply the area with large quantities of illicit drugs from Mexico.
  • Mexican DTOs also use these cells to facilitate the transportation and distribution of drug shipments, primarily marijuana, methamphetamine, and cocaine, from Dallas/Fort Worth to drug markets across the country.

Production

  • The conversion of powder cocaine to crack is ongoing throughout the region.
  • Methamphetamine and marijuana are produced to a limited extent in Dallas/Fort Worth. Methamphetamine production in Dallas/Fort Worth has steadily declined since enactment of statewide legislation limiting the availability of pseudoephedrine, a major precursor chemical used in methamphetamine production. Despite these legislative controls, some local methamphetamine distributors and abusers operate small laboratories, typically producing only enough methamphetamine for personal use or for very limited local distribution. However, they must rely on alternative sources for pseudoephedrine, such as the Internet or out-of-state suppliers.

Most local producers realize that they cannot compete with Mexican DTOs that supply the region with low-cost, high-purity ice methamphetamine produced in Mexico and have disbanded their operations.

  • Local methamphetamine conversion may be more widespread than is currently being reported. A recent investigation revealed that a local resident was converting powder methamphetamine into ice methamphetamine.
  • Law enforcement officials believe that converting powder methamphetamine into ice may be more cost-effective for local distributors than purchasing the drug.

Local outdoor marijuana production is unnecessary and generally unprofitable because of the large quantities of inexpensive Mexican marijuana available in Dallas/Fort Worth.

  • However, marijuana production does take place, particularly marijuana produced from cannabis cultivated at indoor grow sites.
  • Law enforcement officers sporadically seize hydroponic cannabis grows in the Dallas/Fort Worth area. These grows, which are occasionally linked to Asian DTOs and criminal groups, produce limited amounts of marijuana and are able to support only limited local distribution.
  • Officials in Plano, Texas, are reporting the emergence of a new type of marijuana in the local market called "popcorn." This type of marijuana is considered a "tweener" marijuana because the potency and price of the drug fall between those of commercial-grade and hydroponic marijuana; however, it is unknown if the drug is produced locally.

Crack cocaine conversion is common in the Dallas/Fort Worth area; the drug is distributed from Dallas/Fort Worth to markets throughout the HIDTA region.

  • Local African American criminal groups dominate crack cocaine conversion; however, an increasing number of crack abusers are now converting powder cocaine to crack.
  • According to law enforcement reporting, some crack cocaine abusers now purchase powder cocaine from suppliers in Dallas and Houston, transport the drug to their private residences, and convert the powder cocaine to crack.

Transportation

  • Dallas/Fort Worth is a primary transshipment point for methamphetamine, cocaine, and marijuana en route from Mexico to drug markets throughout the country.
  • Law enforcement officials report that the load sizes for cocaine and methamphetamine shipments are increasing and that more large-quantity drug loads are being seized as compared with past years.

Mexican DTOs dominate drug transportation into and through the Dallas/Fort Worth area.

  • Mexican DTOs that are involved in drug transportation into the Dallas/Fort Worth area are highly sophisticated.
  • They use multiple transportation cells and far-reaching networks that facilitate the smuggling of drugs from Mexico and transportation into the metropolitan area and beyond.
  • Transportation cells of Mexican DTOs often specialize in a particular component of the process, such as transportation through Mexico, cross-border smuggling, or transportation from the border area to Dallas/Fort Worth.
  • In addition to transporting illicit drugs on their own behalf, Mexican DTOs contract with other transportation groups to transport illicit drugs to and from Dallas in an attempt to insulate their organizations from law enforcement detection.

According to DEA, Mexican DTOs and transportation organizations are hiring African American tractor-trailer operators to transport cocaine shipments from the U.S.-Mexico border area to Dallas and to drug markets across the country.

Dallas/Fort Worth receives drug shipments from most Southwest Border POEs; however, Laredo and El Paso are the primary entry points for drug shipments destined for the region.

  • During the past year, law enforcement officers have reported increasing amounts of illicit drugs transported from California and Arizona to Dallas.
  • Houston also is a source for significant quantities of illicit drugs, primarily cocaine, that are distributed in Dallas/Fort Worth and surrounding communities.

Distribution

  • Dallas/Fort Worth is a primary drug distribution center in the southwestern United States. The metropolitan area is a regional and national distribution center for wholesale quantities of cocaine, heroin, marijuana, and methamphetamine that are supplied by traffickers in Mexico and destined for the Dallas/Fort Worth area and other national-level markets.
  • Additionally, drug traffickers from across the country travel to Dallas/Fort Worth to purchase illicit drugs from local suppliers.
  • Mexican DTOs control wholesale distribution of most cocaine, heroin, marijuana, and methamphetamine that enter Dallas/Fort Worth. Mexican DTOs are also the primary suppliers of illicit drugs to the area's midlevel and retail distributors.

Many midlevel and retail distributors are increasingly conducting business with multiple Mexican trafficking groups, thereby increasing their access to the types of drugs that they have not distributed in the past.

  • As such, distribution at the midlevel and retail level is largely polydrug in nature. The trend toward polydrug distribution could result in the emergence of serious drug abuse issues as new drug types are introduced into different user communities

Drug traffickers in Dallas increasingly use the Internet to facilitate pharmaceutical drug distribution, particularly through Internet pharmacies.

  • These pharmacies frequently operate numerous Internet sites that redirect users to a central web site, where a network of web site operators and complicit doctors and pharmacists fill orders for prescription drugs.
  • In order to limit potential law enforcement scrutiny, an increasing number of Internet pharmacies list themselves as "closed door pharmacies," which are supposed to distribute pharmaceutical drugs to a very limited clientele, such as nursing homes or prisons.
  • However, these Internet pharmacies illicitly distribute pharmaceutical drugs nationwide.

Law enforcement officials in Dallas also report the increased use of social networking web sites in drug distribution.

The distribution of diverted pharmaceuticals among Dallas teenagers is becoming increasingly common. Some teenagers steal prescription drugs from their parents' medicine cabinets and abuse the drugs themselves or distribute them throughout their peer groups.

  • Dallas teenagers also trade, sell, and abuse different types of pharmaceutical drugs at parties, referred to as pharma parties.

Drug-Related Crime

  • Although statistical reporting is unavailable, law enforcement officials in the Dallas/Fort Worth area indicate that drug-related violent crime has been stable over the past 2 years, with the exception of Tyler, where officials report that drug-related violent crime increased from 2005 to 2006.
  • The distribution and abuse of illicit drugs fuel violent crime and property crime throughout Dallas/Fort Worth.
  • Abusers of crack cocaine and ice methamphetamine frequently commit assaults and shootings to protect their drug operations; they also commit home invasions and robberies to support their drug addictions.

Gang-related violence is a threat to the Dallas/Fort Worth area.

  • Most violence is related to feuds among individual gang members and is not gang-on-gang violence, as in other large cities such as Chicago and Los Angeles.
  • Violent confrontations between gang members are often the result of disputes over drug distribution.
  • Gang members periodically commit crimes such as robberies and assaults against nongang members.

Abuse

  • The fastest-growing drug threat to Dallas/Fort Worth is methamphetamine abuse.
  • The drug's high purity, low cost, and intense, long-lasting physiological effects entice many individuals, including abusers of other drugs, to try methamphetamine.
  • This trend is most prevalent among the area's African American crack cocaine abusers; many now abuse ice methamphetamine in addition to or in place of crack cocaine.
  • The abuse of diverted pharmaceuticals is prevalent throughout the local teenage and young adult population and may be increasing. Pharmaceutical abuse is common among high school students in Dallas/Fort Worth. They frequently take the drugs before arriving at school or at home during their lunch breaks. Also contributing to local teenage pharmaceutical abuse is the tendency of teens to distribute these drugs among their friends and peer groups.
  • The Dallas Police Department (DPD) is also reporting limited abuse of fentanyl by teenagers, generally in the form of Actiq, commonly referred to as fentanyl "lollipops."
  • The abuse of Mexican black tar heroin has resurfaced during the past year in the Dallas/Fort Worth area, particularly in Collin County.
  • Abuse of the drug is increasing among middle-class residents who travel from the suburbs or outlying communities to Dallas and Fort Worth to purchase the drug.

Twenty heroin overdoses and seven heroin-related deaths were reported in Collin County in 2006, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

  • Law enforcement officers also report that heroin distribution and abuse are increasing among teenagers and young adults in Frisco.
    Abuse of "cheese" heroin--a combination of Mexican black tar heroin and Tylenol PM (acetaminophen and diphenhydramine HCl)--is increasing in the Dallas area.
  • This drug combination is popular among Hispanic adolescents, but abuse by Caucasian students is increasing. Once primarily concentrated at northwest campuses within the Dallas Independent School District (DISD), cheese heroin has been encountered throughout the entire school district. As of April 2007, at least 11 DISD schools, including middle schools and high schools, reported the presence of this drug combination on their campuses.
  • Neighboring school districts, including Garland, Mesquite, and Coppell, also report the presence of cheese heroin in their districts; all three districts report student deaths related to cheese heroin. Local officials attribute the deaths of at least 17 Dallas County teenagers since 2005 to cheese heroin; eight of that number were DISD students. Local treatment providers report an increase in treatment admissions for the drug, especially among children and adolescents.
  • Arrests for cheese heroin are also increasing dramatically; DISD officials report 122 cheese heroin-related arrests so far this school year, an 80 percent increase from last year. While no deaths outside Dallas County have been attributed to cheese heroin, officials in
  • Grapevine, Tarrant County, report the presence of cheese heroin in that community. In addition, the DPD reports that the drug is abused by the general public in Dallas.

Cheese heroin typically has a light tan, powdery or granular appearance, is often found folded inside torn pieces of paper, and is snorted by abusers. The low cost of cheese heroin (sometimes as low as $2) makes it affordable to most students and may facilitate its expansion beyond Dallas County and into surrounding North Texas counties.

Illicit Finance

Drug traffickers launder proceeds generated through drug transactions in Dallas/Fort Worth primarily by consolidating and transporting the proceeds in bulk to Mexico for eventual repatriation.

  • Traffickers also use the area as a consolidation point for bulk currency shipments from other regions of the country.
  • Traffickers transport smaller bulk cash shipments to Dallas for consolidation before the shipments are transported to the U.S.-Mexico border area, where they are eventually smuggled into Mexico.

Drug traffickers also use

  • front companies
  • trucking companies
  • structured bank deposits
  • wire transfers
  • real estate
  • the purchase of luxury items

to launder drug proceeds in Dallas/Fort Worth.

  • Asian DTOs frequently launder illicit drug proceeds through the operation of nail salons throughout the Dallas/Fort Worth area.
  • Additionally, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) reports that the operators of locally based Internet pharmacies often launder drug proceeds by structuring bank deposits into local banks and then transferring the funds to offshore bank accounts.
Unclassified Report from the US Department of Justice



End Note
1. The National Clandestine Laboratory Seizure System (NCLSS) is a voluntary reporting system; data are continually updated but may not reflect all methamphetamine laboratories seized.
UNCLASSIFIED