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National Narcotics Intelligence
Consumers Committee 1994
The Supply of Illicit Drugs to the United States
August 1995
Executive Summary
In 1994, cocaine hydrochloride (commonly referred to as cocaine) was readily available in
virtually all major U.S. cities. Trafficking was managed primarily by Colombian drug
mafias that exerted control over the Andean source nations potential cocaine production of
820 to 855 metric tons. In 1994, 303 metric tons of cocaine were seized worldwide. U.S.
Federal law enforcement agencies seized 115 metric tons of cocaine during the year,
according to the Federal-wide Drug Seizure System (FDSS). Colombian drug mafias-loose
consortiums of independent groups-directly managed all aspects of the cocaine trade, from
coca cultivation to Andean Ridge cocaine production and transportation to wholesale
distribution in the United States. These organizations, as well as other smaller groups,
were serviced by a complex infrastructure that transported cocaine by land, sea, and air
conveyances principally to the United States and Europe.
At the U.S. wholesale level, the Colombian drug mafias operated cocaine distribution and
drug money laundering networks comprised of multiple cells functioning in a number of
major metropolitan areas. They maintained meticulous records and used the latest
technology--computers, pagers, and facsimile machines-in their daily operations. Their
actions were coordinated on a daily basis by key managers in Colombia.
Colombian cells remained in contact with North American criminal organizations and
maintained relationships with third-country traffickers as well. During the last several
years, Colombians have used Mexican and Caribbean-based transportation groups to ship
cocaine to the Southwest and Southeast United States, respectively. Primary U.S. bulk
distribution centers included southern California, southern Texas, New York City, and
southern Florida. From these centers, the cocaine was shipped throughout the United States
for delivery to lower level distribution groups in secondary source cities. Chief among
those groups were African-American street gangs and ethnic Dominican, Cuban, Haitian,
Jamaican, Mexican, and Puerto Rican criminal groups that controlled retail cocaine and
crack sales.
In 1994, cocaine prices ranged from $10,500 to $40,000 per kilogram nationally. Kilogram
prices in virtually all major metropolitan areas remained at the lower end of the price
range. Average purity for cocaine at the gram, ounce, and kilogram levels has remained
high for the past several years. Average purity at the gram (retail) level for 1994 was 63
percent. The average purity per kilogram (wholesale) was 83 percent for the same time
period.
Prices for kilogram quantities of cocaine in Europe fell as Colombian traffickers
inundated European markets. Nigerian trafficking groups moved cocaine from Brazil to the
African continent and on to Europe. Eastern European nations such as Poland emerged as new
transit zones.
Large cocaine seizures, often metric-ton sized, occurred in the source and transit regions
in 1994. Traffickers continued to use intermodal means of transport and often concealed
larger shipments in commercial maritime containerized or bulk cargo. Traffickers also are
believed to have experimented with the use of semi-submersible and fully-submersible
vessels to smuggle cocaine from Colombia to northern Caribbean islands or Puerto Rico.
General aviation aircraft and large capacity cargo airplanes, to include jets, were used
to convey cocaine to Mexico from South America.
Since June 1995, three Cali drug mafia kingpins-Gilberto Rodriguez-Orejuela, Jose
Santacruz-Londono, and Miguel Rodriguez-Orejuela-have been arrested by the Colombian
authorities. The Colombian Government is to be commended for these arrests. The long-term
value of these actions, however, only can be evaluated in accordance with the successful
prosecution of the criminal eases against these Cali kingpins. The Rodriguez-Orejuela
brothers and Santacruz-Londono must be incarcerated for a lengthy period of time under
conditions that do not allow them to continue their drug operations.
Heroin available in the United States was produced in four source areas: Southeast Asia
(principally Burma), Southwest Asia/Middle East (Turkey, Pakistan, Lebanon), Mexico, and
South America (Colombia). In 1994, worldwide opium production fell to 3,409 metric tons
due primarily to drought in Southeast Asia. However, opium poppy cultivation in Southwest
and Central Asia expanded.
The U.S. market was dominated by high-purity Southeast Asian heroin, which remained
prevalent in the Northeast and along the East Coast. Ethnic warlord armies in Southeast
Asia produced abundant supplies, which were transported by independent brokers and
shippers. Links between suppliers and brokers connected overseas Chinese criminal
populations to ethnic Chinese wholesale distributors in the United States. United
States-based ethnic Chinese groups consorted with local criminal organizations through
connections initially established in U.S. prisons. Nigerian and West African groups
smuggled Southeast Asian heroin internationally and distributed it in the United States
through contacts with United States-based criminal groups.
Middle Eastern traffickers smuggled Southwest Asian heroin to ethnic enclaves in the
United States. Lebanese, Israelis, Pakistanis, Turks, and Afghan groups all were involved
in supplying the drug to United States-based groups for retail distribution.
Virtually all of the heroin produced in Mexico was destined exclusively for distribution
in the United States. Black tar heroin was produced by Mexican traffickers and sold in the
western United States by Mexican-American criminal networks.
South American heroin, produced in Colombia, was readily available in the Northeast and
along the East Coast, and was trafficked primarily by independent Colombian traffickers.
In fact, data obtained from DEA's Domestic Monitor Program (DMP), a retail level heroin
purchase program, indicated that the availability of South American heroin was steadily
increasing in Northeast U.S. cities. Although South America ranked far behind Southeast
Asia as a source region for heroin destined for the United States, it appeared that
Colombian drug traffickers expanded their foothold in the U.S. heroin market.
Heroin was readily available in many U.S. cities as evidenced by the high level of retail
purity. Indicators reflected significant use in many East Coast cities, due to increased
availability of high-purity Southeast Asian as well as South American heroin. Growing
domestic demand was reflected in high worldwide opium poppy cultivation, opium/heroin
production, and trafficking.
Nationally, in 1994, Southeast Asian heroin ranged in price from $100,000 to $260,000 per
kilogram. Southwest Asian heroin ranged from $75,000 to $200,000. Wholesale-level prices
for Mexican heroin were the lowest of any type, ranging from $50,000 to $250,000. South
American heroin sold for $85,000 to $180,000. The wide range in kilogram prices reflected
variables such as buyer/seller relationships, quantities purchased, purchase frequencies,
purities, and transportation costs.
On the street, heroin purity was directly related to availability. Retail heroin purity
was tracked by the DMP. For 1994, the nationwide average purity for retail heroin from all
sources was 40.0 percent, much higher than the average of 7 percent reported a decade ago,
and considerably higher than the 26.6 percent recorded in 1991. The significant rise in
average purity corresponded directly to the increase in availability of high-purity
Southeast Asian and South American heroin.
In 1994, the retail purity of South American heroin was the highest for any source,
averaging 59 percent, followed by Southeast Asian heroin with an average of 39.7 percent.
Southwest Asian heroin averaged 35.9 percent at the retail level and Mexican heroin
averaged 27.0 percent, almost double its 1991 average.
Heroin purity at the street level was generally highest in the northeastern United States,
where a large percentage of the nation's user population lives. New York City was one of
the major importation and distribution centers for Southeast Asian and South American
heroin. The average purity at the street level in New York City for Southeast Asian and
South American heroin in 1994 was 60.9 percent and 71.0 percent, respectively. Of all of
the DMP cities, Philadelphia, with an average of 64.3 percent, recorded the highest
average purity of retail heroin during the same time period.
Seizures of heroin in excess of 100 kilograms continued to occur in Southeast Asia, but no
such large seizures occurred in the United States during 1994. Worldwide seizures of
heroin amounted to about 23.8 metric tons. In the United States, 1.3 metric tons were
seized. In the Golden Triangle, the Shan United Army, headed by drug lord Khun Sa, found
itself under increasing pressure as the Burmese Army attacked its positions and Thai
authorities limited the flow of goods and services to the Shan State. Khun Sa was dealt a
serious blow in November when Thai police arrested several key Shan brokers. Khun Sa
shifted operations to make greater use of Laos and possibly Cambodia and Vietnam to ship
heroin westward. Nigerian courier organizations continued to smuggle large quantities of
heroin to the United States, making use of transit locations in Asia, Africa, and Europe.
Russian organized crime expanded its worldwide activities and involvement in the heroin
trade.
Marijuana was the most widely abused and readily available illicit drug in the United
States. A resurgence of marijuana trafficking and abuse took place in urban centers across
the United States, spurred by the smoking of marijuana-filled cigars known as blunts.
Marijuana from Mexican sources (whether grown in-country or transshipped from other
sources) supplied more than 50 percent of the marijuana available in the United States.
However, drug law enforcement reported a continued increase in shipments from Colombia,
Venezuela, and, possibly, Jamaica. Domestic cultivation supplied approximately 25 percent
of the U.S. market.
Cannabis was cultivated illicitly in the United States in remote locations, occasionally
on public lands. Major domestic outdoor cannabis cultivation took place in Alabama,
Hawaii, Kentucky, Tennessee, and California. Significant quantities of marijuana also were
produced domestically in indoor growing operations, where sophisticated agronomic
techniques were used to enhance potency and production. Effective eradication of outdoor
crops, fear of detection, drought, plant disease, and theft also contributed to increasing
illicit indoor cultivation.
Domestic cultivators have increased (THC) content-the primary psychoactive
component-through selective breeding and cloning. Moving operations indoors permitted
growers to use advanced cultivation techniques and produce crops year round. Most indoor
operations grow potent sinsemilla, the unpollinated female plant. The number of indoor
operations seized in 1994 was 3,209, compared to the record high of 3,849 seized in 1992.
Mexican polydrug trafficking organizations have smuggled marijuana into the United States
for over 20 years and were responsible for between 50 and 60 percent of the marijuana
available in the United States during 1994, with all of it smuggled across the Southwest
border. In addition to the Mexican organizations, marijuana traffickers from Colombia, the
Caribbean, and the Far East smuggled the drug to the United States. These traffickers used
cargo vessels, pleasure boats, and fishing boats to transport marijuana shipments via
traditional maritime routes.
Mexican polydrug organizations employed a wide variety of transportation and concealment
methods for smuggling marijuana. Shipments of 50 kilograms or less were smuggled by
pedestrians, who crossed at border checkpoints, and backpackers, alone or in "mule
trains ", who crossed at more remote locations. Mexican traffickers also concealed
marijuana in an array of vehicles, including commercial vehicles, private automobiles,
pickup trucks, vans, mobile homes, and horse trailers that were driven through ports of
entry. Shipments larger than 50 kilograms, ranging up to multithousand kilogram amounts,
usually were smuggled in tractor-trailer trucks. Once the marijuana was successfully
smuggled across the border, traffickers consolidated the shipments at central sites in
cities such as Tucson, Arizona; El Paso, Houston, and McAllen, Texas; Los Angeles,
California; and, Las Cruces, New Mexico. From these distribution hubs, marijuana was
shipped to cities in the Midwest, North, and along the Gulf Coast and eastern seaboard.
Domestically, distribution was controlled by a variety of groups and individuals, ranging
from large, sophisticated organizations that controlled cultivation and interstate
trafficking to small independent traffickers operating on the local level. State and local
drug law enforcement officials reported that small groups (5 to 10 individuals) controlled
distribution at the retail level. Domestic street gangs, as well as ethnic groups (usually
immigrants from source countries), made for a wide range of retail dealers.
Prices for marijuana, which vary in accordance with quality, availability, source of
origin, and/or proximity to the point of entry into the United States, have increased
dramatically during the past decade at the high end of the price range. Commercial grade
marijuana that sold for $400 to $600 per pound in 1984, sold for $285 to $4,000 per pound
in 1994.
IX Sinsemilla in 1984 sold for $1,200 to $2,500 per pound, compared to $900 to $9,500 per
pound in 1994. One of the primary factors influencing price was potency, which has
increased substantially for both commercial grade and sinsemilla, with THC content
averaging 4.30 and 7.41 percent, respectively, in 1994.
The term "dangerous drugs"; refers to the broad category of illicitly
manufactured controlled substances, other than cocaine, heroin, and marijuana. Dangerous
drugs include depressants, stimulants, hallucinogens, and controlled substance analogs.
Domestic clandestine laboratories were responsible for the overwhelming majority of
illicitly manufactured dangerous drugs available in the United States.
Methamphetamine, a stimulant produced and distributed primarily in the western United
States, was the most prevalent clandestinely manufactured controlled substance in the
United States. Other significant dangerous drugs of abuse included the hallucinogens
d-lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), phencyclidine (PCP),
3,4-methylenedioxy-methamphetamine (MDMA), the stimulant methcathinone, and the depressant
flunitrazepam. In addition, throughout the United States, criminals engaged in a wide
variety of techniques to acquire and sell legitimately produced controlled substances and
pharmaceuticals .
During 1994, 306 clandestine dangerous drug laboratories were seized, marking the first
year that the number of seizures had increased since 1989. Laboratories came in all sizes
and were found in a variety of locations, from sophisticated underground hideaways to
motel rooms, kitchens, bathrooms, and garages. The most productive laboratories were
located in secluded rural areas, a safe distance from the metropolitan distribution chains
they served. Operators ran the gamut from high school dropouts to chemists with doctoral
degrees.
In 1994, 263 methamphetamine laboratories were seized, primarily in the western and
southwestern United States where most of the nation's methamphetamine production was
centered and availability was highest. Methamphetamine production and distribution
networks also were established in some of the rural regions in the East, such as southern
Pennsylvania.
Numerous individuals, groups, and organizations, from independent entrepreneurs and outlaw
motorcycle gangs to Hispanic polydrug trafficking organizations, manufactured and
distributed methamphetamine. Outlaw motorcycle gangs influenced production in certain
areas, such as California, Colorado, and Texas. In California, Mexican traffickers
dominated the large-scale production and distribution of methamphetamine in the San Diego,
Riverside, San Bernardino, and Fresno areas. Limited evidence suggested that Mexican
traffickers attempted to expand their operations to other areas of the western United
States.
"Ice", is a large-crystal form of d-methamphetamine hydrochloride, identical in
both chemical and pharmacological properties to the powder (small crystal) form of
methamphetamine. Although ice trafficking has remained prevalent in Hawaii since 1988, it
has not emerged as a major drug problem in the continental United States. Much of the ice
methamphetamine available in Hawaii was manufactured in clandestine laboratories in the
Philippines, Taiwan, and China. In 1994, most of the ice available domestically was
smuggled by ethnic Korean traffickers.
LSD was available in retail quantities in virtually every State, and availability
increased in a number of States. LSD production facilities in all likelihood were located
on the West Coast, in the San Francisco, northern California area, and the Pacific
Northwest. Since 1977, only six LSD laboratories have been seized by DEA. The last seizure
by DEA of an active LSD manufacturing laboratory in the United States occurred in 1981 in
Bellevue, Washington.
Distribution of LSD is unique within the drug culture. A proliferation of mail order sales
has created a marketplace where the sellers are virtually unknown to the buyers, providing
the highest-level traffickers with considerable insulation from drug law enforcement
operations. The vast majority of users were white, middle-class high school and college
students who are attracted by the low prices and who perceived the drug as harmless.
PCP production appeared to be centered in the greater Los Angeles metropolitan area. Los
Angeles-based street gangs, primarily the Crips, continued to distribute PCP to a number
of cities in the United States through their cocaine trafficking operations. They posed a
particular problem because of their propensity for violence. PCP abuse peaked in the early
to mid-1980's, and was supplanted by the use of crack cocaine. However, there are recent
indications that PCP abuse has increased somewhat in a limited number of cities. PCP
laboratory seizures since the mid-1980's have ranged from 3 to 21 per year, totals
considerably less than the high of 79 reported in 1978. Nine PCP laboratories were seized
in 1994. MDMA is related to methamphetamine and is known by several street names such as
Ecstasy, XTC, Clarity, Essence, and Doctor. MDMA was shipped by independent traffickers by
post or express mail services from source areas in Texas and the West Coast to
distributors. Three MDMA laboratories were seized during 1994 in the United States.
MDMA was popular among college students, and also was used at all-night dance parties,
principally by middle-class youths. Dosage units of MDMA, often sold in tablets, varied
from 55 to 150 milligrams. Retail prices ranged from $6 to $25.
Recently, there has been an influx of flunitrazepam (Rohypnol) tablets into the Gulf Coast
and other areas of the United States. Rohypnol is a benzodiazepine manufactured in
Colombia, Mexico, and Switzerland by Hoffmann-LaRoche, but not legally manufactured or
marketed in the United States. Rohypnol is reported to be 7 to 10 times more potent than
Valium, and one of the greatest adverse effects of Rohypnol is amnesia. The street price
for Rohypnol was generally $5 per dosage unit, although prices of $6 to $8 also were
reported. Wholesale prices ranged from $1.25 to $3 per tablet. Street names for Rohypnol
included "Rophies", "Ropies", "Ruffes", "Roofies",
and "Roches".
Controlled substance analogs present a unique problem to drug law enforcement. Most
analogs were produced domestically by independent laboratory operators in relatively small
quantities. New analogs may emerge at any time. For instance, during 1992, DEA
investigated a methamphetamine-like analog called methcathinone, which originated from
clandestine laboratories in northern Michigan. In response, DEA arranged for methcathinone
to be placed in Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act in October 1993. Twenty
methcathinone laboratories were seized during 1994, compared with 22 confiscated in 1993.
Methcathinone production and distribution, originally limited to Michigan's Upper
Peninsula region, spread throughout much of the Midwest in 1994.
Legitimately manufactured controlled substances frequently were diverted to the illicit
market. Illegal or fraudulent prescribing and dispensing, and theft from legitimate
channels were used to divert these drugs. Major sources of domestic diversion shifted from
the wholesale to the retail level. Domestically, organized groups of "doctor
shoppers"; operated interstate, often ranging across four or five States in search of
sources. Diversions commonly involved depressants such as benzodiazepines, particularly
alprazolam and diazepam.
Money laundering methods vary by country and regions of the world due to a number of
factors, including: the perhaps most importantly, variations in enforcement pressure. The
continuing evolution in money laundering legislation and economic developments worldwide
have spawned a new generation of money laundering methods.
In 1994, United States-based drug traffickers shipped their profits out of the country in
smaller amounts. This was reflected in DEA's undercover proprietary money laundering
operations.
Money launderers' exploitation of casinos continued to grow as the proliferation of
casinos in the United States was not matched by a growth in resources to monitor them.
River boat casinos became popular and Native Americans opened casinos in almost every
State. Nevada's casinos still are exempt from Federal currency transaction reporting.
Various ethnic groups in the United States new to money laundering have introduced their
own methods or have revised older methods. Ethnic Pakistanis have established businesses
in the United States that service Southwest Asia's hundi underground banking systems.
Invoice manipulation was used to move drug proceeds into and out of the United States.
Russians newly arrived in the United States closed real estate deals with cash carried in
shopping bags; they also used the casinos to launder illicit proceeds that were generated
from a variety of criminal activities. Other money laundering methods that have drawn
attention recently include: the use of swaps (international currency transactions);
payable-through-accounts held by foreign banks in U.S. banks; "smart cards"; for
structuring deposits and transferring money internationally; and cyberbanking for instant
multinational layering of drug deposits.
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