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News (Media Awareness Project) - US TX: Juarez Cartel War May Be Slowing Flow of Drugs into U.S.
Title:US TX: Juarez Cartel War May Be Slowing Flow of Drugs into U.S.
Published On:2010-01-12
Source:El Paso Times (TX)
Fetched On:2010-01-25 23:26:10
JUAREZ CARTEL WAR MAY BE SLOWING FLOW OF DRUGS INTO U.S.

EL PASO -- The cartel war in Juarez is hindering the flow of illegal
drugs and may be the reason for a steep drop in the amount of
marijuana seized last year at "stash houses" in El Paso.

The West Texas Stash House Unit last year reported it seized about
4,200 pounds of marijuana, plummeting from total seizures of 23,700
pounds in 2008 and 41,000 pounds in 2007.

The drop is extraordinary considering that in past years it was not
uncommon for narcotic investigators to make a ton seizure in a single
raid.

There are believed to be hundreds of stash houses in El Paso, where
drugs that have been smuggled across the border are stored before
being transported to cities across the nation.

U.S. narcotics investigators said the drop in stash house seizures is
due in part to difficulties smugglers are having, not only with law
enforcement and the Mexican army, but also with enemy
narco-traffickers in a war between the Juarez and Sinaloa drug cartels.

"Seizures are down, the prices of drugs are up, and further, the
purity of cocaine is down," said Special Agent Diana Apodaca of the
U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in El Paso.

In 2009, about 2,600 people were killed in Juarez due in part to a
fight for control of smuggling routes and street drug sales. There
have more than 100 slayings in 2010.

"The marijuana is there" harbored in Mexico, said Robert Almonte,
executive director of the Texas Narcotics Officers Association. "The
problem is them getting it across over here (to El Paso). With the
escalation of the violence, there is a distrust of who can bring it
over, when they can bring it over."

Because of the fighting in Mexico, the price of marijuana has
increased, said Almonte, who helped launch the stash house unit while
heading the narcotics section of the El Paso Police Department.

Officials with the DEA and U.S. Customs and Border Protection said
smugglers have switched to smaller drug loads to lessen the risks.

In fiscal 2009, CBP officers in El Paso seized 162,180 pounds of
marijuana, compared with 167,570 pounds a year prior.

For the El Paso sector of the Border Patrol, seizures remained about
the same with 87,421 pounds of pot in fiscal '09 and 87,047 in fiscal
'08.

A police sergeant with the West Texas Stash House unit said the number
of cases and arrests last year was comparable to previous years but
the difference was the amount of drugs found was smaller.

Despite the recent decline, stash houses operate throughout the city,
including in new homes, warehouses and retail buildings.

"It's a wide range of locations and people involved in this activity,"
said the sergeant, who asked his name not be published because of the
nature of his job. "Our success is based on the information received
from the public."
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