Mexican Cartels Overcome Pandemic Hurdles to Remain Greatest Criminal Drug Threat to U.S.

Mexican cartels adjusted to restrictions imposed by the global pandemic last year to smuggle huge amounts of narcotics into the U.S. and remain the greatest criminal drug threat to the country, expanding the market as methamphetamine deaths skyrocket. The government classifies them as Transnational Criminal Organizations (TCO) and in 2020 they flooded the nation with illicit drugs though a staggering 28,000 pounds of methamphetamine and millions of counterfeit pills containing fentanyl were seized by law enforcement agents. Bigger loads reached communities around the nation as deaths and seizures involving meth rise sharply and Mexican TCO’s increase the drug’s availability, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration’s (DEA) National Drug Threat Assessment (NDTA).

The annual publication outlines the threats posed to the U.S. by domestic and international drug trafficking and the abuse of illicit drugs, which is at an all-time high. The document also addresses money laundering of drug proceeds and the role of domestic groups, such as violent street gangs, that traffic drugs. “While the COVID-19 pandemic plagues this nation, so, too, do transnational criminal organizations and violent street gangs, adjusting to pandemic restrictions to flood our communities with dangerous drugs,” said DEA acting Administrator D. Christopher Evans in a statement announcing the report’s release. Evans was the agency’s chief of operations before taking over and last year was appointed by then Attorney General William Barr to a presidential commission charged with exploring issues affecting law enforcement. The DEA chief added that this year’s NDTA “shows the harsh reality of the drug threats facing communities across the United States.”

The U.S. saw a record number of drug overdose deaths last year, according to the Centers for Disease Control, which put the figure at more than 81,000. The agency says that synthetic opioids, primarily illicitly manufactured fentanyl, appear to be the primary driver of the increases in overdose deaths. The DEA discloses that Mexican TCOs have established clandestine laboratories in Mexico for the synthesis of fentanyl, and Mexican authorities have encountered a rise in illegal fentanyl pill press and tableting operations. Mexican TCOs are also responsible for the production and trafficking across the Southwest Border (SWB) of the overwhelming majority of heroin available in the United States. Additionally, Mexican TCOs control most of the U.S. drug market and have established varied transportation routes, possess advanced communications capabilities, and hold strong affiliations with criminal groups and gangs in the U.S., the NDTA reveals.

The DEA names nine Mexican TCOs as having the greatest drug trafficking impact on the United States. Among them are the infamous Sinaloa and Juárez cartels, Los Zetas, La Familia Michoacána, Los Rojos and Guerreros Unidos. The TCOs maintain drug distribution cells in cities across the U.S. that report to leaders in Mexico and dominate the nation’s drug market. “The criminal activities of these organizations operating in the United States extend well beyond drug trafficking and have a profoundly negative impact on the safety and security of U.S. citizens,” the NDTA report states. “Their involvement in alien smuggling, firearms trafficking, and public corruption, coupled with the high levels of violence that result from these criminal endeavors, poses serious homeland security threats and public safety concerns.” Though they were temporarily challenged by disruptions associated with COVID-19, the Mexican criminal enterprises found new methods and used existing techniques to continue operating during the pandemic.

In a Homeland Threat Assessment issued just a few months ago, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) divulges that Mexican cartels pose the greatest threat to the U.S. because of their ability to control territory and co-opt parts of government, particularly at a state and local level. “They represent an acute and devastating threat to public health and safety in the Homeland and a significant threat to U.S. national security interests,” the DHS writes in the document.

The post Mexican Cartels Overcome Pandemic Hurdles to Remain Greatest Criminal Drug Threat to U.S. appeared first on Judicial Watch.

Skip The Scoop | Seek Understanding

White House officials, Congress members to tour US border facility

Show Me

Arizona Governor Says Kamala Harris Is ‘The Worst Possible Choice’ To Oversee Border Security

Show Me

Biden taps VP Harris to lead response to border challenges

Show Me

Border Patrol holds migrant families for days under a south Texas bridge

Show Me

Border Agent Gives Inside Account of Overcrowded Facilities

Show Me

Rep. Darrell Issa: Border crisis is being contrived, CBP and ICE told to ‘stand down’

Show Me

Biden Team Ignored Warnings from Career Immigration Officials That Their Actions Could Cause a Border Crisis

Show Me

Cruz, 17 Senators to Visit Donna Overflow Facility on Friday Amid Surge in Illegal Immigration

Show Me

Journalists Start Demanding Substack Censor its Writers: to Bar Critiques of Journalists

Show Me

Facebook Looks To Compete In Market Dominated By Homeless Reporters

Show Me

Biggest Casualty of COVID? Personal Freedoms.

Show Me

Glenn Greenwald criticizes ‘corporate journalists’ who seek to censor news they don’t like

Show Me

New cage facility for migrant children underway in Rio Grande Valley

Show Me

Mexican Drug Cartels Use Children as Decoys to Smuggle Criminals Into US, Texas Sheriff Says

Show Me

Border Patrol Holding Thousands of Migrant Children Past The Legal Limit, Some Detained Longer Than 10 Days

Show Me

New Border Photos Show Children Sleeping Shoulder-to-Shoulder in Transparent Pen

Show Me

“Shameful”: Amid Border Emergency, Immigrant Rights Advocates Urge Biden to Stop Detaining Children

Show Me

Biden Administration to Use San Diego Convention Center as Immigration Shelter Amid Surge

Show Me

3 Fully Vaccinated Hawaii Residents Test Positive for COVID-19

Show Me

Senior Fox Business producer dies from coronavirus complications

Show Me

Project Veritas Obtains Photos of Biden’s Migrant Detention Centers

Show Me

Elections Aren’t The Only Thing The Power Structure Rigs | Monsanto & The World Wildlife Fund Sustainability Certificates

Show Me

How It All Started To Crumble | Bayer Discovers “Black Ops” Division Run by Monsanto

Show Me

Revealed: Monsanto predicted crop system would damage US farms

Show Me

Bayer Won’t Ask U.S. Supreme Court to Reverse First Roundup Loss

Show Me

Strawberries, Spinach, Kale Top EWG’s 2021 ‘Dirty Dozen’ List

Show Me

America’s Proxy Wars With Iran Ramp Up | Saudi Navy Starts Drills to Protect Oil Sites as Attacks Mount

Show Me

Upcoming Pentagon report will detail ‘difficult to explain’ UFO sightings

Show Me

Former Trump intel chief says some recorded UFO behaviors defy explanation

Show Me

US has secret evidence of UFOs breaking sound barrier without a sonic boom

Show Me

Poll Shows Overwhelming Majority Support Voter ID Laws

Show Me

Australian Politicians Push Resolution Condemning China’s Abuse of Uyghurs

Show Me

Suspect bashed Asian woman with pipe during NYC attack

Show Me

Asians Rarely, Though Increasingly Face Hate Crimes

Show Me

YouTube Removed Our Lockdown Anniversary Video, Here’s Our Response

Show Me

Pfizer’s COVID Vaccine Could Become Most Lucrative Drug in the World

Show Me

China has detained my young children. I don’t know if I’ll ever see them again

Show Me

DR JOHN LEE: My darkest predictions have come true… the effects of lockdowns are catastrophic

Show Me

Trump’s net worth dropped by $700 million while he took no salary as President

Show Me

With Biden In Office, ISIS Is Rising From The Ashes Worldwide | ISIS Claims Responsibility for Killing 33 Malian Soldiers

Show Me