DEA Congressional Testimony
Statement by:
Thomas A. Constantine
Administrator
Drug Enforcement Administration
United States Department of Justice
Before the:
Senate Foreign Relations Committee
Regarding:
International Drug Trafficking Organizations in Mexico
Location:
Dirksen Senate Office Building
Room 419
Washington, D.C.
Date:
August 8, 1995
Note: This document may not reflect changes made in actual delivery.
Mr. Chairman, Members
of the Committee: I'm pleased to appear before you today to discuss the
growing role of international drug trafficking organizations
operating in Mexico and to tell you what the Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA) is doing to attack these organizations that are responsible for smuggling
tons of illegal drugs across the U.S./Mexico border.
Mexico is pivotal
to the success of any U.S. drug strategy. Not only do we share a common
border,
through which three-fourths of the cocaine enters
our
country, but Mexico has long been a major source country for heroin and
marijuana. Within the last few years, it has also become a major source
country for
methamphetamine, as well as a transit country for chemicals, especially
ephedrine, used in the
manufacture of methamphetamine.
My purpose at this
hearing today is to talk about the drug trafficking situation and to highlight
our concerns
about the increased role of these
international
drug gangs operating in Mexico. My comments will be limited to observations
on trafficking organizations and their methods of smuggling, the law
enforcement communities' efforts to work with Mexico, and an assessment
of our chances
for success in decreasing the flood of illegal drugs that enter this
country each day and have a devastating impact on the citizens on both
sides of
the border.
A Glimpse
of the Problem
Mr. Chairman, an
important 1989 drug seizure gave us a glimpse of the magnitude of the problem
law enforcement faces
and also illustrates
just how important
Mexico is to our efforts to control illegal drugs coming into our
country. In late 1989, DEA made America's largest cocaine seizure on record
(over 21.5 tons) in Sylmar, California.
This cocaine came
across the border at El Paso and was trucked to
the West Coast. Drug law enforcement was encouraged by such a
huge seizure,
and we were
convinced that we had seriously wounded the Colombian drug organizations
by preventing such a large amount of illegal drugs from reaching
our streets.
But, we realized
our encouragement was premature when we analyzed seized records. What we
found was even more astounding.
We learned
that during
only a 3-month
period, the organization had succeeded in smuggling 55 tons of
cocaine into the U.S. This cocaine had been trucked to Los
Angeles and had
already been
distributed on our streets.
One of the most
disturbing aspects of this case is that ten years ago, we measured drug
seizures in grams
and pounds. Today, we
routinely measure seizures in
tons-even multitons. In January, for example, in Pasadena,
Texas, a
suburb of Houston, we seized 6.5 tons of cocaine. In July,
we seized over 5
tons of cocaine in the border town of El Paso. And one of
the primary reasons
for these
multiton shipments of cocaine is the efficient and mutually-rewarding
relationship that has emerged between the cocaine mafia in
Colombia and the drug trafficking
groups operating in Mexico.
In fact, Mr. Chairman,
we estimate that the Colombian drug mafia is using Mexico as a cocaine
safe haven to
store, at
any one
time, as
much as
70 to 100 tons
of cocaine that will eventually be smuggled across the U.S.
border for distribution on American streets. This is enough
to provide
a line of cocaine to every man,
woman, and child on this planet--and then some. At a conservative
estimate, this cocaine would be worth over $700 million to
$1 billion on America's
streets.
Role of
the International Drug Traffickers
The fact that these
traffickers have been able to accommodate the transportation needs of the
Cali cocaine
mafia is
not something that
happened overnight.
Criminal organizations from Mexico have had decades
of practice. Traditionally, the
Mexican border economies have been significantly affected
by the smuggling activities into and out of the United
States.
It was
these organized
smuggling organizations that rose to prominence in
the late 1960s and 1970s when
marijuana trafficking presented the potential for huge
profits.
During the early
1980's, most of the Colombian cocaine entered the United States through
South Florida by
way of the Caribbean.
But,
traffickers were forced
to find new routes when U.S. drug agencies increased
enforcement action in the Caribbean and South Florida. The Colombian
drug lords naturally
turned
to the trafficking groups in Mexico which had what
they were looking for:
proximity to the United States, a 2,000 mile expanse
of border offering unlimited smuggling
possibilities, and an already established drug trafficking
infrastructure that stood ready to serve their needs.
The drug trafficking
organizations easily adapted their operations to include cocaine trafficking,
and by the
mid-80's, were
well-established and reliable
transporters of Colombian cocaine. Delegating cocaine
transportation to
the traffickers in Mexico was a tactical decision
on the part of the Cali mafia.
With the transportation assistance of these traffickers,
the cocaine barons could now move larger bulk quantities
through
Mexico which
would have been
logistically impossible to move by any other means.
By turning the riskiest part of the cocaine distribution
cycle (the
transportation) over to these
traffickers, the Cali mafia could turn its attention
to other aspects
of their cocaine enterprise.
This drug trafficking partnership has become one
of
both
convenience and profit.
One of the first
traffickers to move cocaine through Mexico and to the U.S. was Juan Ramon
Matta-Ballesteros,
a Honduran,
who,
from
the mid-'70s
to the
mid-'80s, was actively involved with the Mexican
Guadalajara Cartel. This was the group responsible
for the kidnapping
torture and
murder of DEA
Special
Agent Enrique (Kiki) Camarena in 1985. The death
of Agent Camarena outraged the American public.
Matta-Ballesteros
has been
convicted in three separate
U.S. cases and is serving a term of life imprisonment.
Emerging
Traffickers Coming into their Own
Today, there is
no question that drug traffickers operating in Mexico have become major
players
in the international
drug trade.
These
veteran traffickers
have been good students and have learned valuable
lessons from the drug experts--the Cali mafia.
They have seen
the benefit
(and profits)
of
working together in
a partnership to provide a needed transportation
service to the cocaine organizations in Colombia.
Receiving
payment in
both
cash and cocaine,
they have begun to
establish their own cocaine distribution networks
and territories, stretching from the Southwest
border areas
as far as New
York. In effect, the Cali
mafia has been a willing partner in helping
these organizations create distribution
and sales networks in the U.S.
Like the Cali
mafia, these trafficking organizations have demonstrated their flexibility
to change
trafficking routes
when law enforcement
action along
any one route becomes too risky to their
business. These drug groups have also followed the lead
of their predecessors
by
expanding and diversifying
their
product line. Sophisticated trafficking organizations
based in Mexico now manufacture methamphetamine
and smuggle the
precursor chemicals
necessary
for its manufacture.
And, perhaps most important, as they have
expanded their role in
the drug trade, they have made valuable worldwide
contacts, which
will
be necessary
as they
continue to establish themselves as important
players in the world of illegal drugs.
There
are a number of trafficking groups in Mexico that have gained a firm
foothold in the trafficking
of drugs,
but I'd
like to
take a moment
to describe
the four major drug trafficking organizations
that work closely with the Cali mafia:
Tijuana
Cartel
The organization
sometimes referred to the "Tijuana Cartel," is
headed by Benjamin Arellano-Felix
and his brother Francisco. They control most
of
the drugs crossing the border on the
West Coast between Tijuana and Mexicali.
Feuding between
this group and other organizations has become increasingly violent. In
fact,
it was the feuding
between
the Arrellano-Felix organization
and rival drug dealers that led to
the killing of Catholic Cardinal Juan Jesus
Posadas-Ocampo
at the
Guadalajara
airport in 1993
The Arellano-Felix
brothers are currently the subjects of a nationwide
manhunt
by law enforcement
authorities
for their
involvement
in the Cardinal's killing.
On June 23, Mexican authorities
arrested Hector Luis Palma-Salazar, the
leader of a rival drug
organization
that is believed
to be behind the
attempted assassinations
of the Arellano-Felix brothers,
as well as the murder of Cardinal
Posadas-Ocampo.
Benjamin
and Francisco
Arellano-Felix
have
both been indicted in San
Diego, California, and are DEA
fugitives.
The Caro-Ouintero
Organization
The Caro-Quintero
organization is involved in the cultivation,
processing,
smuggling
and distribution
of heroin and
marijuana and the transportation
of Colombian cocaine into
the U.S. This organization was
previously led by Rafael
Caro-Quintero, known as the "Mexican
Rhinestone Cowboy," who
began his criminal career at
the young age of 12 or 13 as
an apprentice to
Pedro
Aviles, a notorious Mexican
drug trafficker.
Caro-Quintero
is currently in a Mexican
maximum security
prison for his involvement
in the
kidnaping, torture
and murder of
DEA Special
Agent
Enrique Camarena,
as well as for marijuana
and cocaine
trafficking. His brother,
Miguel Caro-Quintero, now
runs the organization, and
is under indictment in Tucson and
Denver.
Juarez:
Cartel
One of the most
notorious and powerful of these trafficking
organizations
is the Amado
Carrillo-Fuentes
organization,
sometimes referred
to as the "Juarez
Cartel." Carrillo-Fuentes
has been the chief transporter
for the
recently arrested
Cali mafia leader Miguel
Rodriguez-Orejuela.
Carrillo-Fuentes
owns several airline
companies, which
enables him to
fly 727s from Colombia
into Juarez,
where he runs
his organization from
his ranch headquarters.
Increasingly, murders
in Juarez have been associated
with Carrillo-Fuentes.
In July,
the leader of
the juvenile gangs
he recruits to smuggle
drugs
across the border
was found shot 23 times in
the head.
Here in the
United
States,
Carrillo-Fuentes has
been indicted in Miami on heroin
and marijuana
charges,
and in
Dallas on
cocaine charges.
Juan Garcia-Abrego
Another
influential Mexican trafficker
acting in concert
with the Cali
mafia is Juan Garcia-Abrego,
who is involved
in smuggling
drugs from
the Yucatan
area in Mexico
to South Texas and up to New
York. Juan
Garcia-Abrego was
recently added
to the
FBI's
top ten
most wanted fugitives,
with a $2
million reward
for his capture.
This is the
first
time an international
drug trafficker
has been included
on the FBI
list.
This organization
transports large
quantities
of cocaine for
the Cali
mafia, as well
as marijuana
and heroin for other
traffickers.
Garcia-Abrego pioneered
deals in which
Mexican traffickers take
payment
in
cocaine, which
substantially
raised their profits,
and
at the same time
diversified their
involvement
from beyond
smuggling to
the role of
suppliers to their own
drug distribution networks.
He and his organization
are notorious
for the
violence they
employ to further
and
protect
their illicit
trade.
He also
ships bulk
amounts
of cash
for the Cali
mafia. During
a four-year
period,
from
1989 to
1993, $53
million was
seized in
connection with
the Garcia-Abrego
organization.
Two American
Express
bankers in
Brownsville,
Texas, were
indicted
for laundering
$30 million
for Garcia-Abrego,
and
to date,
70 members of
his
organization
have been
prosecuted and convicted
in the U.S.
Juan Garcia-Abrego
has been
indicted in Houston
and
remains a
fugitive.
Expanding
Influence: Cocaine and Methamphetamine
DEA is very
concerned
about the
expanding
role of
drug organizations
based in
Mexico
which are playing
an increasingly
larger
role in
the shipment
and distribution
of cocaine
and methamphetamine
to the
United States.
Cocaine
In
the last
few years,
we've
seen international
trafficking
organizations
make
major changes
in
their efficiency
in
transporting bulk
shipments
of
cocaine
to
transporting organizations
in
Mexico. Traditionally
trafficking
organizations
used
twin-engine general
aviation
aircraft
to
transport cocaine
from
Colombia
to
transhipment locations
in
Mexico and
the
Caribbean. Today,
however,
the
Cali mafia has
bought
passenger
jets
(like 727's)
gutted
them,
and are
using
them
to transport multiton
loads
of cocaine
to
the
trafficking organizations
in
Mexico. In March
of
this
year, for
example,
a Caravelle
jet
aircraft was
seized
in
the Mexican
State
of
Sonora,
after
being
abandoned by traffickers
when
its
tires became
stuck
in the dirt
runway.
Mexican
Government forces
later
seized
2.8 tons of
cocaine
that
are believed
to
have
been off-loaded
from
that Caravelle.
Law
enforcement has
also uncovered
two tunnels
built to
move cocaine
from Mexico
into the
United States.
The
first
was discovered
in Arizona
in 1990.
The second
nearly-completed
tunnel was
discovered in
1993 near
the Tijuana
Airport and
led to
an unfinished
warehouse in
the United
States.
Methamphetamine
U.S.
law enforcement
is also
concerned about
the growing
role of
trafficking gangs
operating in
Mexico involved
in the
methamphetamine trade.
We directly
attribute the
increased amounts
of methamphetamine
available in
the U.S.
to these
trafficking organizations
which have
replaced domestic
outlaw motorcycle
gangs
as the
predominant methamphetamine
producers, traffickers,
and distributors.
Unfortunately,
DEA is
very much
aware of
the problem
of these
methamphetamine gangs
operating in
the U.S.
Last summer,
DEA Special
Agent Richard
Fass was
shot and
killed in
Tucson by
a methamphetamine trafficker
during
an undercover operation.
The ring
leader of
the gang
responsible for
Agent Fass'
death has
still not
been apprehended
and is
believed to
be in
Mexico. The
DEA is
currently working
with both
the FBI
and Mexican
authorities to
apprehend him.
In
the last
three years,
these trafficking
organizations have
virtually saturated
the western
United States
market with
high-purity methamphetamine,
known
also as "speed" or"crank." In
some areas
of California,
it has
now reportedly
replaced cocaine
as the
drug of
choice. With
a saturated
West Coast
market, these
traffickers have
begun to
expand their
markets to
the East
Coast and
in the
South. DEA's
southern offices
report a growing
presence of
these trafficking
groups providing
methamphetamine to
domestic trafficking
organizations in
rural and
suburban areas
of Georgia,
Tennessee, Kentucky,
and the
Carolinas.
As
supplies have
increased, prices
have
fallen, making it
a cheap
alternative to
cocaine. Some
have
called it
the "poor man's cocaine." In
1991, for
example, the
lowest pound
price nationwide
was $6,000.
Today, in
California, methamphetamine
sells
for between
$2,500 and
$3,600 per
pound.
With
increased availability,
methamphamine use
has increased.
According to
the Drug
Abuse Warning
Network, the
number of
emergency room
episodes involving
methamphetamine has
increased steadily
since 1991,
particularly in
the West.
From 1991
to 1993,
episodes more
than doubled
in both
Los Angeles
and Phoenix.
The
dominance
of
Mexico-based,
poly-drug
organizations
in
methamphetamine
trafficking
is
further
evidence
of
their
growing
sophistication.
The
smuggling
skills
developed
while
transporting
cocaine
for
the
Cali
mafia
has
enabled
these
organizations
to
branch
out
into
moving
other
contraband,
such
as
precursor
chemicals,
especially
ephedrine
and
pseudoephedrine,
used
in
the
manufacture
of
methamphetamine
.
They
have established
international
connections
in Europe,
Asia and
the Far
East to
obtain the
shipment of
tons of
precursor chemicals,
particularly ephedrine,
to addresses in
both United
States and
Mexico. During
1993 and
1994, the
majority of
ephedrine shipments
destined for
Mexico were
supplied by
such diverse
countries as
China, India,
the Czech
Republic, and
Switzerland. From
mid-1993 to
early 1995,
DEA documented
the diversion
of almost
170 tons
of ephedrine
used in
illicit methamphetamine
production. It's
important to
note, however,
that DEA
has obtained
cooperation from
many of
these countries
to stem
the flow
of chemicals
going
to Mexico.
It's
difficult to
predict
where
this newest
surge of methamphetamine
use
and trafficking
will
lead, but
we must not
assume
that it has
peaked. Unlike
other drugs,
methamphetamine
is
one that
these criminal
organizations
can
control
entirely from
beginning to
end.
They have
the international
contacts
to
obtain the
necessary
precursor chemicals
to make the
drug.
They have
the clandestine
labs
to process
the chemicals
into
methamphetamine
on
both
sides of the
border. They
have
expanded their
distribution
networks
across
the nation
by the use
and intimidation
of
illegal aliens.
And, unlike
their previous
role
as middle-men
moving
cocaine and
heroin,
they
can keep
100 percent
of the
profits from
their
methamphetamine
sales.
U.
S. law
enforcement
may
be in
for a
difficult
and
violent
few
years as
we work
to get
the methamphetamine
problem under
control.
We've
already
seen "meth" smuggling
gangs face
off against
each other.
Recently, in
San Diego,
a confrontation between
meth
smuggling groups
with ties
to Mexico
resulted in
26 homicides.
There may
be more
bloodshed on
our streets,
as these
drug gangs
fight to
protect (and
expand) their
drug turf.
DEA's Response
In
response
to the
threats
of
the Mexico-based
trafficking organizations
and their
surrogate drug
gangs
operating here
in the
United
States,
DEA has
taken a
number
of steps
to
work with
our law
enforcement
partners
in Mexico,
as
well as
with our
Federal,
state,
and
local colleagues
here at
home.
DEA
has joined
forces with
the FBI
in a Southwest
Border Initiative
that
targets the major
Mexican
trafficking organizations
for enforcement
actions.
Combined teams
of state,
local
and federal
law enforcement
led
by DEA and
FBI Special Agents
are working
together with
a common goal
of disrupting
these gangs
and bringing
their
leaders to justice.
For
the first
time, the
DEA, the
FBI, the
Department of
Justice Criminal
Division, and
respective U.S.
Attorneys in
every state
along the
Southwest Border
are coordinating
both intelligence
and
manpower resources
against a
common enemy--the
poly-drug trafficking
organizations
that are
transporting
increased amounts
of cocaine,
heroin, marijuana,
and methamphetamine
across our
borders.
Both the
DEA and
the FBI
hold high
expectations
for the
success for
this operation.
Three
new binational
Border Task
Forces have
been established
and will
focus on
the four
principal
trafficking
organizations.
Senior personnel
of the
DEA, FBI,
and DOJ
Criminal
Division
serve on
a U.S./Mexican
Plenary Group,
working to
enhance our
cooperation
against narcotics,
money laundering,
arms smuggling,
and other
crimes.
Mr.
Chairman,
in
this open
forum
I
cannot
explain
the specifics
of how
this new
initiative
will
work,
but
I would
be happy
to discuss
this in
more detail
in a
closed
session
or a
private
briefing.
Our
support
for
Mexico's
drug
fighting
efforts
is
critical
to
their
success--and
ultimately
to
our
own.
Attorney
General
Reno
and
Mexican
Attorney
General
Antonio
Lozano-Gracia
have
pledged
to
work
cooperatively
to
address
the
problems.
Hopefully,
a close
and
coordinated
law
enforcement
response
by
our
two
countries
will
have
an
impact
on
this
growing
problem.
Future Threats: An Assessment
There
is
no
question
that
the
international
drug
trafficking
organizations
operating
in
Colombia
and
Mexico
have
had
a
direct
impact
on
the
multiton
quantities
of
cocaine
law
enforcement
is
forced
to
deal
with
today.
These
organizations
have
proven
to
be
a
serious
threat
to
both
the
United
States
and
Mexico.
In
recent
years,
as
the
political
and
economic
ties
between
the
United
States
and
Mexico
have
strengthened,
a
new
generation
of
international
traffickers
have
been
able
to
carve
out
an
ever
larger
share
of
the
world's
drug
trade
and
pose
a
growing
threat
on
both
sides
of
the
border.
We've
seen
these
trafficking
organizations
grow
from
low-level
smuggling
groups
to
sophisticated
organizations
that
smuggle
more
and
more
drugs
of
every
kind--cocaine,
heroin,
marijuana,
and
now
methamphetamine--into
the
U.S.
They
are
increasingly
being
paid
for
their
transportation
expertise
with
cocaine,
a
move
that
could
prove
to
be
the
undoing
of
the
Cali
mafia
and
could
shift
the
balance
of
power
within
the
worldwide
cocaine
trade.
Mr.
Chairman,
in
a
few
years
down
the
road,
I
believe
it's
entirely
possible
that
these
newly
emerging
groups
could
rise
to
an
equal
(or
superior)
footing
with
the
Cali
mafia.
If
this
happens,
life
as
we
know
it
in
both
the
United
States
and
Mexico
will
change
dramatically.
They
care
little
for
the
devasting
impact
they
have
on
the
people
of
Mexico
and
the
United
States.
They
are
international
criminal
elements
that
must
be
dealt
with.
The
President
of
Mexico,
Ernesto
Zedillo,
has
publically
stated
to
the
American
media
that
drug
trafficking
is
a
threat
to
Mexican
national
security,
not
only
because
of
the
crime
that
is
inherent
in
such
activity,
but
also
because
of
the
growing
wealth
that
enables
traffickers
to
corrupt
police
and
government
institutions.
As
these
organizations
grow
in
wealth
and
sophistication,
they
threaten
to
overwhelm
the
capabilities
of
any
law
enforcement
system,
including
Mexico.
By
comparison,
we
have
a
professional
law
enforcement
system
in
the
United
States,
at
the
Federal,
state
and
local
level,
that
promotes
and
encourages
high
standards
in
recruitment,
training,
internal
inspections,
standards
of
operations
and
accountability
to
electecl
officials.
We
have
a
criminal
justice
system
that
is
quick
to
respond
to
charges
of
unethical
or
corrupt
actions
on
the
part
of
law
enforcement.
It
has
helped
to
professionalize
our
law
enforcement
agencies
and
insure
a
continuing
quest
for
ethics
and
integrity.
Despite
our
best
efforts,
unethical
or
illegal
activities
do
occasionally
occur
within
the
ranks
of
our
law
enforcement
agencies,
requiring
swift
and
decisive
government
action
to
preserve
the
public's
faith
and
trust.
As
a
society,
we
provide
modern
and
sophisticated
resources
to
our
law
enforcement
agencies
to
combat
the
criminal
elements
confronting
them.
The
law
enforcement
institutions
in
Mexico
do
not
presently
have
an
infrastructure
similar
to
those
in
the
U.S.
The
development
of
such
institutions
will
require
a
substantial
commitment
of
time
and
resources
to
achieve
the
necessary
level
of
professionalism.
The
potential
exists
that
if
this
is
not
done,
they
may
be
overwhelmed
by
the
wealth
and
influence
of
the
drug
organizations.
We
are
not
alone
in
recognizing
this
problem.
Attorney
General
Lozano
has
moved
to
have
special
police
units
report
directly
to
him.
He
has
announced
a
plan
to
include
reviews
of
all
Federal
police
officers
and
prosecutors,
with
mandatory
drug
testing,
to
combat
internal
corruption.
I
cite
this
only
to
illustrate
that
the
Mexican
government
itself
recognizes
this
is
a
problem.
It
is
imperative
that
we
work
with
our
partners
in
Mexico
to
blunt
the
influence
these
drug
traffickers
are
having
in
both
our
countries.
It
is
also
imperative
that
our
own
Federal,
state,
and
local
law
enforcement
continue
to
work
cooperatively
together
to
make
the
best
use
of
our
resources,
as
well
as
to
increase
our
impact
on
these
trafficking
organizations.
Surely,
when
we
speak
of
tons
of
drugs
coming
across
our
borders
and
causing
tremendous
damage
to
the
health
and
well-being
of
our
citizens,
we
are
talking
of
a
national
security
threat
that
demands
our
immediate
and
continuous
attention.
DEA
is
hopeful
that
future
counterdrug
efforts
with
Mexico
will
be
successful.
In
the
past
year,
Mexico
has
instituted
new
programs
that
include
attempts
to
professionalize
its
law
enforcement
institutions
and
increase
cross-border
cooperation
to
address
the
threat
of
the
international
traffickers.
The
direct
and
cooperative
communication
between
Attorney
General
Reno
and
Attorney
General
Lozano
should
be
of
great
help
in
securing
a
coordination
of
our
resources
to
address
a
common
problem.
The
threat
is
serious--and
it is real. |