News (Media Awareness Project) - Mexico: Mexican Official Faults US Border |
Title: | Mexico: Mexican Official Faults US Border |
Published On: | 2001-10-18 |
Source: | The Herald-Sun (NC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-25 06:39:33 |
MEXICAN OFFICIAL FAULTS U.S. BORDER
MEXICO CITY -- Increased security along the U.S. border after the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks in New York and Washington has made it harder for
smugglers to move drugs onto American soil and increased cocaine use in
Mexico, a police official said Wednesday.
Crime Prevention Director Pedro Jose Penaloza told a news conference that
cocaine smugglers, afraid to cross a fortified U.S. border, have begun
selling drugs at rock-bottom prices in the central states of San Luis
Potosi, Aguascalientes, Queretaro and Guanajuato.
The states have long been considered part of the "smugglers' bridge to the
U.S.-Mexican border," Penaloza said.
Penaloza said Mexico has become so saturated with cocaine that drug dealers
in some locales are offering the usually high-priced narcotic at prices
that are cheaper than the normal street price of marijuana.
MEXICO CITY -- Increased security along the U.S. border after the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks in New York and Washington has made it harder for
smugglers to move drugs onto American soil and increased cocaine use in
Mexico, a police official said Wednesday.
Crime Prevention Director Pedro Jose Penaloza told a news conference that
cocaine smugglers, afraid to cross a fortified U.S. border, have begun
selling drugs at rock-bottom prices in the central states of San Luis
Potosi, Aguascalientes, Queretaro and Guanajuato.
The states have long been considered part of the "smugglers' bridge to the
U.S.-Mexican border," Penaloza said.
Penaloza said Mexico has become so saturated with cocaine that drug dealers
in some locales are offering the usually high-priced narcotic at prices
that are cheaper than the normal street price of marijuana.
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