![]() National Drug Intelligence Center |
Illicit drug abuse is prevalent throughout the CBAG region because of the area's sizable abuser population and steady supply of illicit drugs from Mexico. According to the San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG) Substance Abuse Monitoring (SAM) program, marijuana is the most abused and readily available drug in the region; approximately four out of every five arrestees in the CBAG region report having used marijuana at some time in their life.4 Methamphetamine is also widely abused, ranking second only to marijuana as the drug most abused by San Diego County arrestees. According to SAM data, the typical abuser smokes methamphetamine (77%), as opposed to snorting it (14%) or injecting it (9%). SAM data further reveal that heroin and cocaine abuse is stable at high levels. Abuse of ODDs and diverted pharmaceuticals, although significant, poses a less significant threat than the abuse of other illicit drugs.
Figure 2. Positive Drug Test Results Among Arrestees in San Diego County, By Race/Ethnicity, August 2007
Source: San Diego Association of Governments, Criminal Justice Research Division, Substance Abuse Monitoring Program, August 2007.
Methamphetamine abuse accounts for 49 percent of all primary drug treatment admissions (excluding alcohol) in San Diego County, followed by heroin (22%) and marijuana (17%). The San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency reports that opiates (including heroin) account for the largest number of emergency room and hospital visits involving drug dependence.
Bulk cash smuggling to Mexico is the primary method used by traffickers to move drug proceeds from the CBAG region to Mexico, largely because of the area's proximity to the U.S.-Mexico border, limited inspections of southbound traffic by U.S. and Mexican law enforcement officers, and the relative ease with which cash can be placed into Mexican financial systems. Traffickers, predominantly Mexican DTOs, typically smuggle bulk currency through the San Ysidro and Calexico POEs in hidden compartments within vehicles; however, some traffickers also smuggle bulk currency in commercial and private aircraft, by couriers on passenger bus lines, and by parcel carriers and express mail services.
Mexican DTOs also use the CBAG region as a consolidation point for illicit drug proceeds generated at drug markets throughout the country. Mexican traffickers either transport currency in bulk to the region or use money services businesses (MSBs) to wire funds to the area. The illicit funds are typically consolidated at stash sites in the region and eventually transported in bulk to Mexico. Once in Mexico, the funds are often deposited into a Mexican bank and/or a casa de cambio5 and then repatriated to the United States through electronic wires or bulk cash transportation by armored car or courier services. Once in the United States, the illicit funds appear as proceeds from a Mexican financial institution and are documented with a Currency or Monetary Instruments Report (CMIR),6 giving the funds the appearance of legitimacy.
Mexican DTOs also launder illicit drug proceeds in the CBAG region through MSBs and wire remitters. The number of MSBs and wire transfer businesses along the border has increased noticeably in the last several years. These businesses are commonly located within grocery stores and gas stations; they accommodate the Hispanic community's personal and financial dealings with family, friends, and businesses in Mexico and Central America but are commonly exploited by traffickers. Additionally, ICE officials report that an increasing number of traffickers in the CBAG region use illegal drug proceeds to purchase prepaid stored value cards (PSVCs) as a means of laundering drug proceeds. Traffickers purchase PSVCs in the region and openly carry them across the U.S.-Mexico border in California without fear of seizure. PSVCs provide a unique and simple money laundering method that DTOs use to smuggle profits from the United States to Mexico and also to send instant cross-border remittances.
DTOs, gangs, and independent dealers operating in the CBAG region also launder illicit proceeds through a variety of other methods. They commonly commingle illicit proceeds with funds from legitimate businesses, such as automobile dealerships, retail stores, real estate companies, and restaurants. These groups or individuals also purchase high-value assets with proceeds or use underground banking services to launder illicit drug proceeds. Additionally, DTOs launder their drug proceeds through the many gambling establishments controlled by Native American tribes throughout San Diego County.
4. Representatives from the San
Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG) Substance Abuse Monitoring (SAM)
program approach arrestees within 48 hours of their arrest and/or incarceration
and ask them to voluntarily answer a series of questions regarding their drug
use history.
5. Casas de cambio located in Mexico are nonbank
financial institutions (currency exchangers) that provide a variety of financial
services and are highly regulated by the Mexican Government. As of March 2007,
24 casas de cambio were registered with Mexico's Federal Income
Secretary.
6. CMIRs must be filed by (a) each
person who physically transports, mails, or ships, or causes to be physically
transported, mailed, or shipped, currency or other monetary instruments in an
aggregate amount exceeding $10,000 at one time from the United States to any
place outside the United States or into the United States from any place outside
the United States, and (b) each person in the United States who receives
currency or other monetary instruments in an aggregate amount exceeding $10,000
at one time that have been transported, mailed, or shipped to the person from
any place outside the United States.
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