Mexican Drug Cartels Out of Control in the U.S. and Mexico
By Michael Webster: Investigative Reporter Aug 3, 2008 1:oo PM PDT
For years now US federal officials have reported that the Mexican drug cartels are operating in dozens of US cities, and have consolidated their control of the entire corridor of the supply chain of illegal drugs from deep in Mexico north to the U.S. border and beyond.
Nationwide, the Mexican drug cartels are now the dominant distributors of wholesale quantities of cocaine, heroin, methamphetamines and marijuana in the United States. No other group is positioned better to expand there already nationwide operation and take over total distribution of drugs in the south eastern part of the country too, then are the Mexican drug cartels as they now do in the south western part of the country.
Mexican drug cartels through their segregate organizations control the lucrative methamphetamine trade, as the arrival of purer Mexican ice methamphetamine has replaced locally produced powder meth, according to the US Department of Justice.
Glen Beck of the popular show of
the same name said,” Atlanta has become the
latest battleground for Mexican drug cartels.”
"Their idea is to control the whole economic process of production and distribution," said Georgina Sanchez, an independent security consultant in Mexico and executive director of a public safety policy institute.
In many areas of the United States the cartels have entered into partnerships with local gangs, in others they have directly assumed control of local drug distribution, analysts say.
According to Beck, “The Mexican side of the
border is essentially a war zone with the
Mexican government fighting, losing, or
sometimes in collusion with the heavily-armed
drug cartels. You’re not going to see much
about it in the mainstream media. And for some
reason, this just isn't a topic anymore.”
Gwinnett County, Georgia, where Atlanta is
located is over 1,000 miles from our U.S. -
Mexico border. They have already had nine
drug-related kidnappings this year.
In one incident it just happened a couple weeks
ago, DEA agents raided a home and charged three
men, all illegal aliens, with kidnapping and
conspiracy to distribute cocaine after finding
that they had
bound and chained
the
victim to a wall
in a basement in the town of Lilburn
and beat him for nearly a week in
an effort to collect $300,000 in drug debt.
Google or Click on: Mexican Cartel Zetas Attack and kill an American in Phoenix
"The violence in [American] cities has a direct cause and effect related to what is taking place in Mexico," said Fred Burton, vice president for counterterrorism at Stratfor, an Austin-based private intelligence company.
"The farther north you go from the border, the less that is understood," said Burton, who is a member of the Texas Border Security Council, which focuses on homeland security and economic development along the Texas-Mexico border.
The biggest worry for local law enforcement groups is that the cartels will bring with them violent methods honed during furious cartel wars in Mexico that have left thousands dead since 2006. In recent years, Mexican drug violence has reached new heights, with beheadings, videotaped executions broadcast on the Internet, and the targeting and killings of top Mexican law enforcement officials. Google or click on: Two U.S. Marines arrested and indicted for Execution style murder over drug money
Beck, said, “There are no good guys in this story except the people who are on the front line, like Rodney Benson. He is the Special Agent-in-Charge of the Atlanta Field Division of the DEA.”
From excerpts from the program Beck asks, “Let’s
start, what did I miss about that guy who was
chained to the wall? Tell me a little bit about
this.”
“He was a distributor of narcotics up the East
Coast, and he was lowered down under a ruse to
come down and see the Mexican suppliers here in
Atlanta.
And when he went to a house just in the metro
area, he was pulled into a garage where seven
armed men took him, took him out, essentially
beat him, brought him down into the basement of
this house where he was shackled in this
unfinished basement. And his hands were cuffed.
Then they took rolls of duct tape and
essentially his entire face, his nose, pretty
much everything was just covered with tape.
And over the course of a week, we became aware
of this. And what we ended up doing, Glenn,
through a number of different investigative
means, we found the house where this individual
was being held. And what we did was we conducted
a rescue operation. And this individual, when we
found him, was chained in the basement, severely
dehydrated and he was beaten as well. And we
saved his life.” Benson said.
BECK: All right, is it true that some of
these people that are kidnapping in Atlanta are
as young as 16 years old? The kidnappers?
BENSON: We’re seeing younger individuals being
deployed by Mexican cartel leadership up into
the United States to work for these cartels.
Google or click on:
Mexican
drug cartels infiltrating colleges and high
school campuses in America
BECK: Okay, there are two people who have
a little bit of credibility on this. There’s the
Gwinnett D.A. that said this is not a blip. This
is significant in what’s going on here. U.S.
Attorney for the northern part of Georgia said,
we are about to see the extreme violence that is
happening south of the border happen here in
America.
“Not a lot of people because nobody is
really covering this in the mainstream media,
according to Beck. Google or click on:
Young
girl raped and beheaded in Florida by Mexican
traffickers
But we’re watching it. The violence south of the
border is off the charts. It’s more violent
there than it is in Baghdad or Afghanistan.
They’re beheading people said Benson. Google or
click on:
Violent
beheadings kidnappings for ransom forcing
Mexican’s to flee to the U.S.
Beck, do you believe this is the kind of
stuff that is coming our way if we don’t do
something and pay attention to this?
What we’re doing, Glenn, is we’re aggressively
attacking that problem. Clearly, Mexican drug
trafficking organizations are the dominant force
that we’re facing here in the metro area.
They’re responsible for the lion’s share of
cocaine and methamphetamine and marijuana and
black tar heroin that’s being distributed here.
It’s coming here; it’s going up the Eastern
Seaboard.
We’re facing a very -- it’s a challenge for us.
They’re getting more sophisticated. They’re
absolutely armed to the teeth; AK-47s and other
weapons. According to Benson.
BECK asks: And they’re targeting this
county because this is a large Hispanic
community. So these drug gangs are just kind of
trying to blend in to the Hispanic community?
What is the reaction for the community? Are they
standing up? Or are they afraid? Google or click
on:
Mexican
Drug cartels terror reaches deep into the U.S.
It’s not just that county, Glenn. What
you have is multiple counties in metro Atlanta.
Now we’re seeing it, too, in a big way in North
Carolina.
The community is reporting information to
police. And that’s what they should continue to
do. There’s a steady stream of tips and leads
that come into law enforcement that we’re able
to react to and I don’t anticipate that stopping
anytime soon. Said Benson.
"Their idea is to control the
whole economic process of production and
distribution," said Georgina Sanchez, an
independent security consultant in Mexico and
executive director of a public safety policy
institute
DEA agents say that the cartels' incursions into the United States are spurring more secondary crimes, such as shootings, kidnapping, and murders.





























