The alarming rise of
violence in Mexico perpetrated by warring Mexican drug
trafficking organizations and the effects of that violence
on the United States, particularly along the U.S. Mexican
Southwest Border. The responsibility for this ongoing
violence rests with a limited number of large, sophisticated
and vicious criminal organizations known as Mexican Drug
Cartel (MDC’s) or as the U.S. Government prefers to call
them Mexican drug trafficking organizations (DTOs) – not
individual drug traffickers acting in isolation. Their
illicit drugs are destined for communities throughout the
United States, Mexico and Europe. They generate billions of
illegal dollars annually. These organizations support
candidates for local and national office and bribe officials
and particularly Mexican law enforcement all the way from a
local Mexican cop on the beat to the highest levels of the
Mexican Federal police and all levels in between.
These organizations also
use violence to protect trafficking routes throughout Mexico
and deep into the U.S. These organizations retaliate against
individuals, organizations and uncooperative law enforcement
personal thought to have betrayed them, and to intimidate
both Mexican and American law enforcement and both countries
citizens. Drug-related murders in Mexico doubled from 2006
to 2007, and more than doubled again in 2008 to
approximately 6,200 murders. Almost 10 percent of the
murders in 2008 involved victims who were law enforcement
officers or military personnel. To date in 2009 there have
been approximately 4,000 drug war-related murders in Mexico.
During the last decade the surrogates of Mexican drug
cartels meaning Mexican gangs and American gangs have
expanded their presence across the United States and
dominate the US drug trade and operate in over 230 American
cities and are expanding at an alarming rate.
The U.S. Government has
in the past concentrated on arresting low level drug dealers
and users. Rarely was any high ranking operative much less
Mexican Drug Cartel members tracked down or brought to
justice.
From the lowly drug user
to the small time dealer the old war on drugs rarely seemed
to be able to find and arrest those who operated in the
upper rungs of the drug trade. Very few drug organized
growers, producers, processors or those that finance the
illicit drug trade here in this country much less
organizations like the Mexican Drug Cartels have been
brought to Justice.
Now that the U.S. has
done away with the term “War on Drugs” according to the
government a new approach is being developed whereby the
U.S. Government working with other governments plan to get
to the root of the problem by dismantling transnational
organized criminal groups, such as confronting the Mexican
Drug Cartels as criminal organizations, rather than simply
responding to individual acts of criminal violence.
Pursued vigorously, and
in coordination with the efforts of other U.S. Government
agencies and with the full cooperation of other Governments
like Mexico, the U.S. believes this strategy can and will
neutralize the organizations causing the violence.
U.S. Government documents
show that during a report to Congress this month by Lanny A.
Breuer an assistant attorney general in the criminal
division United States Department of Justice stated that
“the department’s strategy to systematically dismantle the
Mexican drug cartels, which currently threaten the national
security of our Mexican neighbors, pose an organized crime
threat to the United States, and are responsible for the
scourge of illicit drugs and accompanying violence in both
countries. He begins by emphasizing the priority that this
issue commands at the highest level of the department’s
leadership, including the U.S.
Attorney
General himself.

Most recently, on June 5th, in Albuquerque,
New Mexico, Attorney General Holder, Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) Secretary Napolitano, and Office of National
Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) Director Kerlikowske released
President Obama’s National Southwest Border
Counternarcotics Strategy (Strategy), designed to stem
the flow of illegal drugs and their illicit proceeds across
the Southwest Border and to reduce associated crime and
violence in the region.
This Strategy directs
Federal agencies to increase coordination and information
sharing with State and local law enforcement agencies,
intensifies national efforts to interdict the southbound
flow of weapons and bulk currency while stopping illicit
contraband from being trafficked north, and calls for
continued close collaboration with the Government of Mexico
in efforts against the drug cartels. The Strategy is an
important component of the Administration’s national drug
control policy and complements the Administration’s
comprehensive efforts to respond to threats along the
border.
In his remarks on the
Strategy, Attorney General Holder stated, “Drug trafficking
cartels spread violence and lawlessness throughout our
border region and reach into all of our communities, large
and small.” He further noted, “By focusing on increased
cooperation between the U.S. and Mexican governments as well
as enhanced communication within U.S. law enforcement
agencies, the National Southwest Border Counternarcotics
Strategy we introduce today provides an effective way
forward that will crack down on cartels and make our country
safer.”
Another important component of the
department’s efforts to neutralize the powerful Mexican drug
cartels is the Mérida Initiative, a partnership between the
Government of Mexico and the United States. The Mérida
Initiative presents new opportunities for expert
collaboration on many fronts. With Mérida funded programs
coordinated by the Department of State, the Department
plans, among other things: (1) to place two experienced
federal prosecutors in Mexico to work with their
counterparts in prosecutorial capacity-building; (2) to
assign a forensics expert in Mexico; (3) to assist Mexican
law enforcement and our interagency partners in
strengthening and developing vetted teams and task forces
that can work with U.S. federal law enforcement agencies to
attack the cartels across the range of their criminal
conduct; (4) to advance fugitive apprehension with U.S. law
enforcement agencies and extradition with our Criminal
Division experts; (5) to assist Mexico in developing an
asset management system to deal with the assets seized and
forfeited in criminal cases; (6) to assist Mexican law
enforcement and prosecutorial offices in strengthening their
internal integrity; (7) to assist Mexican law enforcement
officials and prosecutors in enhancing evidence collection,
preservation and admissibility; and (8) to provide expert
consultations on victim assistance and witness protection
issues. At the same time, as an operational matter, the
department continues to work closely with Mexico as it
addresses the issue of cartel-related public corruption,
including through investigative assistance.
Further the report goes on
to say that the department’s strategy to identify, disrupt,
and dismantle the Mexican drug cartels has five key elements
and supports the National Southwest Border
Counternarcotics Strategy. First, the strategy employs
extensive and coordinated intelligence capabilities. The
Department pools information generated by our law
enforcement agencies and federal, state and local government
partners, and then uses the product to promote operations in
the United States and to assist the efforts of the Mexican
authorities to attack the cartels and the corruption that
facilitates their operations. Second, through
intelligence-based, prosecutor-led, multi-agency task forces
that leverage the strengths, resources, and expertise of the
complete spectrum of federal, state, local, and
international investigative and prosecutorial agencies, the
department focuses its efforts on investigation,
extradition, prosecution, and punishment of key cartel
leaders. As the department has demonstrated in attacking
other major criminal enterprises, destroying the leadership
and seizing the financial infrastructure of the cartels
undermines their very existence. Third, the Department of
Justice, in concerted efforts with the Department of
Homeland Security, pursues investigations and prosecutions
related to the trafficking of guns and the smuggling of cash
and contraband for drug-making facilities from the United
States into Mexico. Much of the violence and corruption in
Mexico is fueled by these resources that come from our side
of the border. Fourth, the department uses traditional law
enforcement approaches to address the threats of cartel
activity in the United States.
These threats include the
widespread distribution of drugs on our streets and in our
neighborhoods, battles between members of rival cartels on
American soil, and violence directed against U.S. citizens
and government interests. This component of the department’s
strategy will inevitably include investigations and
prosecutions of U.S.-based gangs that forge working
relationships with the Mexican drug trafficking
organizations (DTOs).
Fifth, the department
prosecutes criminals responsible for
federal
crimes involving murder, trafficking, smuggling, money
laundering, kidnapping and violence. The ultimate goals of
these operations are to neutralize the cartels and bring the
criminals to justice.
Related Articles:
Mexican Drug Cartels
dominate drug trafficking in more than 230 U.S. cities
By
MICHAEL WEBSTER
American’s most
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By
Michael
Webster
May 29, 2009
Today, Attorney General Eric Holder announced a new
International Organized Crime Intelligence and Operations
Center (IOC-2) that will marshal the resources and
information of nine U.S. law enforcement agencies, as well
as federal prosecutors, to collectively combat the threats
posed by international criminal organizations to domestic
safety and security.
Read more
Sources:
National Southwest Border Counternarcotics
Strategy
Office of National Drug Control Policy
June 2009
STATEMENT OF
LANNY A. BREUER
ASSISTANT ATTORNEY
GENERAL
CRIMINAL DIVISION
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
WILLIAM HOOVER
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR FOR
FIELD OPERATIONS
BUREAU OF ALCOHOL,
TOBACCO, FIREARMS AND EXPLOSIVES
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
ANTHONY P. PLACIDO
ASSISTANT ADMINISTRATOR
FOR INTELLIGENCE
DRUG ENFORCEMENT
ADMINISTRATION UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
BEFORE THE UNITED
STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
COMMITTEE ON OVERSIGHT
AND GOVERNMENT REFORM
HEARING ENTITLED
“THE RISE OF MEXICAN
DRUG CARTELS AND U.S. NATIONAL SECURITY”
DEA
FBI
AP Photo
El Debate de
Culiacn-Carla Sajaropulos
Laguna Journal
U. S. Border Fire
Report