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DEA
Congressional Testimony
July 9, 2003
Statement
of
Rogelio E. Guevara
Chief of Operations
Drug Enforcement Administration
Before
House Judiciary Committee
Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security
July 9, 2003
"Disrupting
the Market: Strategy, Implementation,
and Results in Narcotics Source Countries"
Executive
Summary
The vast majority
of our country's drug control program is based at home: it is dedicated
to domestic law enforcement, border interdiction, and treatment and prevention
programs within the United States. However, about nine percent of the
federal drug control budget is dedicated to international efforts. That
investment in source countries is critical. A balanced, effective drug
control program must include an international element because, while the
United States has its share of marijuana growers and has seen an increase
in methamphetamine laboratories throughout the country, the greatest drug
threat lurks outside of our borders.
Transnational
drug trafficking organizations headquartered outside our borders seek
to prey upon vulnerable American citizens by supplying vast amounts of
dangerous drugs. For example, approximately 90 percent of the cocaine
hydrochloride (finished product) entering the United States originates
in or passes through Colombia. Source country efforts are essential because
traffickers are not restricted by boundaries. The very nature of the drug
trade is transnational. It respects no borders, recognizes no jurisdictions,
and favors no nationalities. Drugs have always been an international phenomena
to some degree. Drug smuggling across international borders is a centuries-old
problem; but what is new is the scope. The speed of high-tech communications
and instant electronic transfer of funds allow traffickers to market drugs
faster and farther than ever before. Consequently, rather than focus solely
on stemming the flow after these drugs have crossed into the United States,
the DEA takes a transnational approach, and focuses on drug control efforts
at the point of origin-the source country.
In short, the
DEA and our allies employ a strategy of attacking the power and pocketbook
of international criminal organizations that threaten our national security.
In implementing this strategy, our source country efforts seek to disrupt
the drug market and deny drug trafficking organizations safe refuge outside
the legal jurisdiction of the United States. The DEA's international focus
and substantial overseas presence continues to reap dividends for our
nation's counter-drug efforts. Through steady persistence the DEA and
its host nation counterparts have intercepted tons of precursor chemicals
and dismantled previously untouchable trafficking organizations, all while
enhancing the critically important law enforcement infrastructure in principal
source countries.
The DEA employs
a broad, three-tiered approach to operations in source countries:
- First, we work
with our international counterparts to disrupt and ultimately dismantle
the organizational heart of drug trafficking organizations. We target
the top echelon of leadership, and offer the intelligence and operational
support needed to execute these organizational offensives. We also work
through chemical control programs to deny traffickers necessary ingredients
in the manufacture of illicit drugs. The goal is to increase risks for
traffickers, decrease availability of drugs in this country, and build
successful prosecutions to put international traffickers out of commission.
- Second, we
build international cooperation and enhance law enforcement institutions
in our partner countries. The DEA is the premier drug law enforcement
agency in the world, and is committed to sharing that expertise with
our counterparts. Our mission is to enlist foreign support to fight
transnational crime and equip our partners with the means and know-how
to combat drug trafficking organizations.
- Third, we provide
the critical international assistance needed to break the drug trade
as a financial source for terrorists. The DEA works using undercover
and other investigative techniques to uncover drug and terrorism-related
money laundering activities using the international financial institutions
and alternative remittance systems.
Chairman Souder,
Ranking Member Cummings and distinguished members of the subcommittee,
it is my distinct pleasure to appear before you once again in my capacity
as Chief of Operations of the DEA. Before I begin, Mr. Chairman, I would
like to recognize you and the members of the committee for your outstanding
support of DEA's mission and the men and women who serve it.
In this testimony,
the DEA will offer specific examples of how we work across the globe to
target the heart of drug trafficking organizations, establish and enhance
our international cooperation, and sever the source of drug proceeds to
terrorists. There are a number of countries that cause DEA concern because
of their sourcing of the drug trade; including Burma, Bolivia, Peru, Afghanistan,
and the Netherlands. I will focus on Mexico, Colombia, and Peru to examine
our current strategy and the successes we have achieved in the global
effort to fight drug trafficking both domestically and internationally.
MULTI-COUNTRY
ERADICATION STRATEGIES
DEA's Source Country
Initiative
The purpose of DEA's
Source Country Initiative is to expand international drug programs in
Latin America by disrupting and dismantling drug trafficking organizations
in foreign countries, reduce the flow of drugs to 1992 levels, and destroy
the drug traffickers surrogate networks in the United States. DEA began
development of the Source Country Initiative in 1996, when Congress authorized
75 Special Agents and appropriated $60 million in Congressionally Mandated
Programs. In addition to staffing, the Source Country Initiative also
consists of annual appropriations totaling $20 million for Vetted Units
and $2 million for the Peru Riverine Program.
As a result of this
initiative, DEA was able to enhance source country operations by placing
additional Special Agents in support of Latin America, and provide increased
drug law enforcement assistance to Bolivia, Colombia and Peru. Intelligence
information derived from this presence has enabled DEA domestic offices
to immobilize many of the foreign-based surrogate trafficking networks
before they have become entrenched in the United States.
Sensitive Investigative
Units
The heart of DEA's
international operations may lie in the Sensitive Investigative Unit (SIU),
a program that began as a result of collaboration with Colombia and has
since been used as a model for the formation of such units in other countries.
This group of specifically trained and vetted police officers, which carry
out highly sensitive investigations directly impacting upon the United
States, have been directed to target the command and control centers of
the world's most significant drug trafficking organizations. There are
currently 29 distinct SIUs operating in nine different countries around
the world (Mexico, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Brazil, Pakistan, Thailand,
Dominican Republic and Uzbekistan). They are organized based on their
investigative responsibilities, which include high level investigations
of major drug trafficking organizations, chemical investigations, and
money laundering. A residual benefit of this program is the long-term
enhancement of the integrity and professionalism of law enforcement.
SIU operational success
stories are common, but carry special significance because in every case,
the host nation has exercised a capability that the DEA has helped them
to build. While we give them the capability to address what is for them
a domestic problem, it actually extends all the way to the streets of
the United States. In each case, the SIUs have tackled complex multinational
narcotics investigations that resulted in the disruption of trafficking
organizations far from our shores.
Operation Seis
Fronteras
In FY 2000, Operation
Seis Fronteras was established as a South American regional initiative
to control and combat the illicit use of precursor and essential chemicals
utilized in the production of cocaine and heroin. This DEA sponsored initiative
includes core operational participation by Colombia, Peru, Bolivia, Venezuela,
Ecuador, Argentina, Brazil and Chile. Several representatives from Central
America, the Caribbean, and the European Union have also participated
in Seis Fronteras planning meetings and intelligence exchanges. To date,
there have been five Seis Fronteras operational phases, which have resulted
in the seizure of hundred-ton quantities of solid chemicals, and several
million liters of liquid chemicals. This initiative has formed a lasting
partnership in the region to address chemical diversion and the organizations
that supply essential chemicals to clandestine laboratories.
Centers for Drug
Information
In September 2001,
the DEA sought to implement a plan that would achieve communications connectivity
between law enforcement officials in neighboring countries. Member nations
that agreed to participate in the Centers for Drug Information (CDI) project
would have access to a cost effective communications network (the Internet
infrastructure) enabling person-to-person information exchanges. Four
regional Centers located in geographical regions of Mexico and Central
America, the Andean Ridge, the Southern Cone, and the Caribbean will facilitate
the collection of counter-narcotics intelligence and ensure the timely
analysis and dissemination of the collected intelligence to network members.
The DEA has since
provided law enforcement personnel in 41 countries in Latin America and
the Caribbean with a network of over 150 computers sharing a wide array
of tactical and investigative information. This computer network will
permit access to electronic mail using standard Internet connections,
through which information concerning ongoing investigations can be shared.
DEA expects all four regional Centers and off-site locations to be fully
operational beginning this month.
PRINCIPAL SOURCE
COUNTRIES
Mexico: A Model
of Progress
Mexico is a source
country for heroin, marijuana, and methamphetamine available in the United
States. The country faces an array of drug-related problems ranging from
production and transshipment of illicit drugs to corruption, violence,
and increased internal drug abuse. Powerful and well-organized Mexican
organizations control drug production and trafficking in and through Mexico,
as well as the laundering of drug proceeds. These organizations also have
made a concerted effort to corrupt and intimidate Mexican law enforcement
and public officials. In addition, the geographic proximity of Mexico
to the United States and the voluminous cross-border traffic between the
countries provide ample opportunities for drug smugglers to deliver their
illicit products to U.S. markets.
Despite these problems,
the Government of Mexico has achieved tangible victories against drug
trafficking organizations since President Vicente Fox-Quesada assumed
office in December 2000. Mexican law enforcement has executed a number
of significant arrests that have had a disruptive impact on some of Mexico's
most entrenched and violent drug trafficking organizations. Perhaps the
most notable arrests were of Gulf Cartel head, Osiel Cardenas-Guillen,
who was apprehended on March 14, 2003, and the arrest of Arellano-Felix
Organization head, Benjamin Arellano-Felix, on March 10, 2002.
Just yesterday, Attorney
General John Ashcroft announced the unsealing of two indictments charging
a total of 12 individuals who represent the top hierarchy of the Arellano-Felix
Organization (AFO). Long-reputed to be one of the most notorious multi-national
drug trafficking organizations ever, the AFO controlled the flow of cocaine,
marijuana and other drugs through the Mexican border cities of Tijuana
and Mexicali into the United States. Its operations also extended into
southern Mexico as well as Colombia.
In an unprecedented
show of international cooperation between the United States and Mexico
in criminal narcotics prosecutions, Mexican Attorney General Rafael Macedo-De
La Concha, whose office provided substantial assistance to the U.S. during
the course of the investigation, joined Attorney General Ashcroft to announce
the indictments. The indictments allege that, beginning in the mid-1980s
and continuing to the present, the AFO was responsible for the importation
and distribution of hundreds of tons of cocaine and marijuana in the United
States. In addition, the indictment alleges twenty murders in the U.S.
and Mexico that were carried out by the AFO.
DEA is incredibly
proud to have been a part of the international cooperation exhibited by
the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Internal Revenue Service, the
Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the California Bureau
of Narcotics.
Although there have
been no extraditions of high-level Mexican drug traffickers by the Government
of Mexico since the October 2001 decision barring extradition if the fugitive
faced a potential life sentence, we are encouraged that the Government
of Mexico has sought reconsideration of this decision by the Mexican Supreme
Court.
Heroin
Although not the
leading producer of heroin, virtually all of the opium converted to heroin
in Mexico is destined for the United States. In 2002, the potential production
of pure heroin in Mexico was estimated to be 5.6 metric tons, which is
slightly below the six-year average of 7.2 metric tons. Moreover, according
to DEA's Heroin Signature Program, approximately 30 percent of wholesale
heroin seized at ports of entry in 2001 were of Mexican origin.
As of 2002, eradication
efforts by the Government of Mexico have increased, resulting in the decrease
of opium gum and pure heroin production. During 2002, the Mexican Army
deployed as many as 20,000 soldiers at any one time to eradicate drug
crops manually, while the Mexican Federal Attorney General's Office employed
helicopters to spray herbicides on illicit crops. Within the past six
months, drug traffickers have taken aggressive steps to combat the eradication
efforts of the Mexican Government. A recent example involved the downing
of a helicopter used to spray the poppy fields by small arms fire which
resulted in the death of several Mexican law enforcement officials.
Mexican opium cultivation
is widely dispersed across a large potential growing area in the western
Sierra Madre mountains. This cultivation region is further divided into
northern growing areas (primarily Sinaloa and Chihuahua states) and southern
growing areas (primarily Guerrero state). While the Government of Mexico
does not produce estimates of illegal drug crop cultivation, the U.S.
Government estimates that Mexico's 2002 net opium poppy crop cultivation
was approximately 2,700 hectares. The 2002 figure represents a 33 percent
decrease from 2001's estimate of 8.4 metric tons. Rainfall, or lack thereof,
is seemingly the most influential factor in opium yield. For example,
a sharp decline in heroin production to 3.4 metric tons in 2000 was due
to a severe drought in Mexico during 1999 and 2000. During 2001, however,
rainfall in key growing areas returned to near normal levels, allowing
opium poppy cultivation to rebound to pre-drought levels.
Marijuana
In 2002, Mexican
eradication forces destroyed 30,800 hectares of marijuana. These efforts
keep marijuana fields small in size - on average less than 1,000 square
meters in area - and widely dispersed and hidden to prevent detection
by reconnaissance assets. The relatively low cost, easy processing, and
high profit margins associated with marijuana have sustained cannabis
cultivation as a reliable source of profit for Mexican drug trafficking
organizations.
Mexican drug trafficking
organizations have long relied upon the consistent income generated through
marijuana trafficking. In relying upon marijuana as a significant cash
crop, Mexican organizations undoubtedly utilize this crop as a ready source
of revenue to fund countless nefarious activities, including the satisfaction
of drug debts to other international cartels.
Methamphetamine
Drug trafficking
organizations (DTOs), using large-scale laboratories based in Mexico and
the Southwestern United States, currently produce the majority of the
methamphetamine available in this country. As a result, it appears that
Mexican DTOs control the majority of the methamphetamine supply in the
United States. During the last ten years, Mexican DTOs gained their foothold
in the United States by marketing inexpensive, high purity methamphetamine.
Mexican DTOs yield extraordinary profits from methamphetamine production
and trafficking because they do not need to depend on Colombian suppliers.
These DTOs have secured access to precursor chemicals (specifically ephedrine
and pseudoephedrine) on the international market, which has greatly facilitated
their ability to produce large amounts of methamphetamine.
Over the years, the
Government of Mexico has not had the appropriate personnel to oversee
the flow of precursor chemicals throughout Mexico. At the request of DEA,
the Agencia de Federal Investigaciones (AFI) has recently agreed to create
a Sensitive Investigations Unit within the AFI to investigate precursor
chemicals/illicit pharmaceuticals trafficking in Mexico.
During FY 2003, the
U.S. Government will continue to assist and steer Mexican counterparts
towards investigations that can translate into successful prosecutions
of cases involving diversion of controlled chemical and pharmaceutical
products. To date, no criminal case has been filed against a chemical
diverter in Mexico. The United States will continue their efforts to convince
Mexico to establish a Chemical Control Task Force or to create an SIU
dedicated solely to the investigation of diversion-related cases. Additionally,
the United States will continue to encourage Mexico to organize and carry
out joint operations, such as the proposed "Operation Pepe,"
to investigate the legitimate uses and possible diversion of precursor
chemicals used in the production of methamphetamine. The United States
will also continue to encourage the Mexican Government to take a more
aggressive stance against "date rape" drugs and controlled pharmaceutical
products that are easily obtained in and along the U.S.-Mexico border.
Finally, the United States will continue supporting the initiatives and
goals of the U.S.-Mexico Bilateral Chemical Working Group, and promote
and enhance the Mexican diversion control program in FY 2003.
Mexican Sensitive
Investigative Units
The vetted unit
initiative is the centerpiece of our counter-drug cooperation with the
Government of Mexico. There are currently 180 investigators and tactical
persons on board throughout 11 SIUs. Vetted units are essential in creating
the confidence required to exchange sensitive law enforcement information
with our Mexican counterparts and in establishing the competence of these
Mexican authorities to effectively act on this information in order to
obtain meaningful results that advance our bilateral counter-drug interests.
As an example, the SIU program in Mexico was instrumental in the successful
completion of Operation Lion's Grip, which targeted the Flores-Larios
methamphetamine group. This multi-national investigation resulted in the
seizure of 15 methamphetamine labs and over 130 lbs. of methamphetamine
with a potential street value of over $1 million.
The Fox Administration
has embraced the vetting concept to such an extent that they are now using
it as the model to conduct integrity screening for all personnel assigned
to the Mexican Federal Attorney General's Office. This new found interest
in rooting out corruption has been the driving force behind recent counter-drug
successes in Mexico. The SIUs are Mexico's primary participants in any
bilateral efforts. On a larger scale, the vetted unit initiative has proven
to be a highly effective tool throughout Latin America.
Airport Interdiction
Program
In order to improve
the coordination of interdiction efforts against drug couriers, DEA agents
in Bogota, along with Colombian officials, have invited Mexican law enforcement
and DEA Mexico Country Office Agents to travel to Bogota and participate
in briefings concerning effective ways to identify organizations responsible
for current smuggling activities. While still in their developmental stage,
these efforts will undoubtedly yield dividends as law enforcement authorities
exchange intelligence on the trends associated with airline smuggling
ventures.
Collective Targeting
In February 2003,
DEA and Mexican law enforcement officials met in Mexico to develop a protocol
for the exchange of sensitive information and leads to be shared in combating
priority enforcement targets. In May 2003, a second meeting was held in
Houston, Texas, resulting in the identification of five poly-drug targets
that DEA and Mexican law enforcement officials will attack in a coordinated
effort. Strategy and coordination meetings will be held on a quarterly
basis for the exchange of investigative information and to evaluate the
status of these investigations.
The Osiel Cardenas
Organization
The Osiel Cardenas
Organization controls the Southwest Border smuggling corridor through
Matamoros, Mexico into the Brownsville, Texas area. This major drug trafficking
organization controls what is left of the old Gulf Cartel under Juan Garcia
Abrego, who remains in a Texas prison. The head of this organization,
Osiel Cardenas-Guillen, and seven of his associates are under indictment
in the Southern District of Texas. Cardenas and ten of his associates
are wanted for the assault and attempted kidnappings of DEA Special Agent
Joseph Dubois and Federal Bureau of Investigation Special Agent Dan Fuentes
on November 9, 1999. During the assault, individuals of this organization
were armed with AK-47 and AR-15 assault rifles, demonstrating complete
disregard for the safety of U.S. law enforcement officers.
On March 14, 2003,
Cardenas was arrested in Matamoros, Mexico. He was charged under Mexican
law with violations of organized crime statutes, as well as crimes against
health, money laundering, and narcotics trafficking. Until his arrest,
Cardenas had been the DEA Mexico-Central America Division's number one
priority target. Working under the same philosophy applied in the case
of Agustin Vasquez Mendoza, the accused killer of DEA agent Richard Fass,
the Monterrey Resident Office and four SIUs had been focusing on Cardenas'
capture with increased Mexican Government assistance. This additional
assistance represented part of an encouraging, sustained effort on the
part of the Fox Administration to bring high-level traffickers to justice.
Colombia: Confronting
the Threat
Colombia produces
the vast bulk of the world's cocaine. In fact, approximately 90 percent
of the finished cocaine product reaches the United States. DEA has also
become increasingly concerned with the high purity of South American heroin
that has in recent years dominated the eastern United States.
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COLOMBIAN
DRUG SEIZURES (2001 & 2002) 1
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COCA
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2002
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2002
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Eradication
(ha)
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84,250
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122,965
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Net
Cultivation (ha)
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169,800
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144,450
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OPIUM
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|
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Eradication
(ha)
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2,583
|
3,371
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Net
Cultivation (ha)
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6,540
|
4,900
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SEIZURES
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|
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Heroin/Morphine
(mt)
|
0.798
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0.699
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Opium
(mt)
|
0.002
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0.110
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Cannabis
(mt)
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80
|
73
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Cocaine
Base/Basuco (mt)
|
26.70
|
30.00
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Cocaine
HCl (mt)
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57.30
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94.00
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Total
Arrests
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15,832
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15,199
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1The seizure and eradication data
for the following table was derived from the U.S. State Department's International
Narcotics Control Strategy Report as reported by the Colombian Government.
Seizure data shows combined CNP and Colombian military figures. The cultivation
figures are based on information from the U.S. Crime and Narcotics Center
(CNC). Figures are in hectares (ha) and metric tons (mt).
The excellent U.S./Colombian
extradition relationship accounts for the extradition of 114 Colombian
nationals to the U.S. in the past two and a half years. Those extradited
have been high-level drug traffickers and drug-related money launderers,
as well as terrorists and other organized crime members, and many of these
have been charged in the U.S. as a result of coordinated U.S. and Colombian
investigations.
Cocaine
Mexico and Central
America comprise the primary corridor for cocaine moving to the United
States. The Administration's cocaine flow data indicates that, in 2002,
about 72 percent of all cocaine hydrochloride (HCl) departing South America
(including much from Colombia's North or Pacific coasts) toward the United
States transited Central America or Mexico via eastern Pacific or western
Caribbean routes. Cocaine arriving in Mexico usually is transported into
the United States via the Southwestern Border with Mexico. Generally,
cocaine arriving in Central America is transshipped to Mexico for further
shipment to the United States.
The Caribbean is
the other major corridor for cocaine moving to the United States. The
Administration's cocaine flow data indicates that, in 2002, about 27 percent
of all cocaine HCl departing South America towards the United States transited
various Caribbean islands. The remaining one percent went directly from
South America to the mainland United States without any intermediary stops.
With approximately
144,450 hectares of net coca cultivation in 2002, Colombia potentially
produced 680 metric tons of cocaine base. This represents a 15 percent
decline from the 795 metric tons of cocaine base Colombia potentially
produced in 2001. Regardless, Colombia continued to account for about
77 percent of the world's potential cocaine base production. This is a
dramatic trend considering Colombia produced about 25 percent of the world's
cocaine base as recently as 1995. Accordingly, in the past seven years,
Colombian traffickers have become less dependent on Peruvian or Bolivian
cocaine base sources of supply because of domestic coca cultivation.
Heroin
With approximately
4,900 hectares of opium poppy under annual cultivation in 2002, Colombia
potentially produced 11.3 metric tons of 100 percent pure heroin in 2002,
a decrease from 15.1 metric tons in 2001. DEA analysis indicates that
wholesale-level Colombian heroin seized by the Bureau of Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (BICE) in 2002 had an average purity of 79.6 percent.
By global standards,
Colombia produces relatively little heroin-less than five percent of the
world's total estimated production in 2002. However, all available law
enforcement investigative and intelligence reporting confirms that high
purity, low-priced South American heroin continues to dominate the heroin
market in the eastern United States. Given its strong grip on the domestic
market, heroin from Colombia continues to be a major public health and
drug law enforcement threat to the United States.
Bogota Heroin
Task Force
In FY 2002, DEA received
Congressional approval to establish the Bogota Heroin Task Force (BHTF),
whose goal is to aggressively address South American heroin at its source.
The BHTF is a combined DEA and Colombian National Police (CNP) Task Force
comprised of 13 DEA personnel and 40 CNP officials. The BHTF focuses its
efforts on targeting heroin trafficking organizations, especially those
with regional and international implications. Intelligence derived from
the BHTF also supports the State Department and CNP opium poppy eradication
program, the in-country interdiction of chemicals and heroin production
materials, and the establishment of drug intelligence information exchange
systems between the CNP, Colombian Military, and other Andean Countries.
The formation of
this Task Force has significant importance for the United States because
approximately 59 percent of the heroin seized in the United States is
of Colombian origin. This is in contrast with an estimated combined total
of 24 percent arriving from Southwest Asia (16 percent) and Southeast
Asia (8 percent).
Heroin/Rural Confidential
Source Program
The Bogota Country
Office (BCO) has developed a heroin Confidential Source (CS) Program to
develop human intelligence to assist in identifying and targeting those
involved in the production and trafficking of heroin in Colombia. The
goals of this project include the location of poppy cultivation areas,
routes of opium latex movement, morphine base and heroin HCl production
labs, as well as the identification of chemists, brokers, and those exercising
a command and control function within the heroin trafficking organization.
Information collected under this program will be used to develop leads
that facilitate the Heroin Task Force's targeting and dismantling of heroin
trafficking groups, and to assist the State Department in their eradication
efforts.
Airport Interdiction
Program
The majority of the
South American heroin leaves Colombia as a result of couriers carrying
multi-kilogram quantities aboard Colombian commercial flights destined
to the United States directly or through other intermediary countries
(i.e., Panama, Mexico, etc.). In response to this threat, DEA, along with
host nation counterparts and the State Department's Narcotics Affairs
Section (NAS), has implemented an extensive strategy to improve airport
interdiction programs throughout Colombia. The foundation of this initiative
is to improve the training and equipment needs to support the interdiction
efforts of assigned officers.
Operation Rebound:
Success at the Source
The target of this
investigation was a Medellin, Colombia-based heroin trafficking organization
with cells operating in New York, Newark, and Philadelphia. This organization
sent heroin shipments via airline couriers from Colombia to New York,
usually via Venezuela, carrying the heroin secreted in suitcases, shoes,
wallets, etc. Over 19 kilograms of heroin were seized and 40 defendants
were arrested as a result of this investigation.
Riverine Program
In late 2002, the
Lima Country Office (LCO) Riverine Program was expanded to include support
to neighboring countries, including Colombia. This regional Riverine strategy
was designed to deny major trafficking organizations the use of the river
systems in Peru, Colombia, Ecuador, and Brazil. This expansion will give
the respective countries an enhanced ability to address the most current
drug threats facing the United States. In particular, this expansion will
include the waterways along the coasts of northern and eastern Colombia.
DEA Intelligence indicates that drug trafficking organizations operating
in these areas are using waterways to traffic illicit narcotics, precursor
chemicals, and weapons shipments.
Colombian Sensitive
Investigative Units
The DEA Intelligence
Group in Colombia provides analytical support for numerous counter-drug
initiatives including the SIUs. These groups of foreign law enforcement
officials are vetted, trained, equipped and guided by DEA. Staffing levels
for the five SIUs in Colombia are 160 national or local officers. The
SIUs, each with a specialized mission, are located primarily in major
cities.
Operation Pegasus
II
On March 27, 2003,
the BCO, Colombian National Police Sensitive Investigations Unit (CNP-SIU),
the Colombian Fiscalia's Office, the Colombian Navy, and the Tampa District
Office executed the takedown of Operation Pegasus II, a multi-district,
multi-agency, Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) investigation.
The Mario Valencia-Trujillo organization was responsible for transporting
multi-ton loads of cocaine from the Pacific Coast of Colombia. The enforcement
operation involved the coordinated execution of 55 search warrants and
seven U.S. Provisional Arrest Warrants (PAW) in the following Colombian
cities: Cali, Medellin, Puerto Tejada, Bogota, and Buenaventura. Fifteen
of the nineteen targets were arrested. Among the seized items were $30,000
in United States. Currency, 60,000,000 in Colombian pesos (approximately
$24,000 U.S. dollars), $100,000 in jewelry and watches, HF communication
equipment used to communicate with fishing vessels, six fishing vessels,
and several weapons.
Operation Wirecutter
On January 15, 2002,
the BCO Group II, in conjunction with the Departamento Administrativo
de Seguridad (DAS), the DAS/DEA Sensitive Investigative Unit, the Colombian
Fiscalia's Office, the Special Operation Division (SOD) and the New York
El Dorado Task Force, culminated Operation Wirecutter. This 11-month joint
operation with the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection and the New
York El Dorado Task Force targeted the money laundering activities of
Colombian national, Norberto Romero-Garavito, and several of his associates.
During the course of this investigation, approximately 400 kilograms of
cocaine, 5.5 kilograms of heroin and over $2.3 million was seized. Romero-Garavito
was extradited to the United States on March 7, 2003.
The investigation
initiated more than 45 wiretaps of both fixed and cellular telephones
in Bogota, Colombia. The intelligence gleaned from the wiretaps revealed
that Romero-Garavito was a money broker who maintained numerous contacts
with other money brokers and money laundering facilitators. This investigation
demonstrated that Romero-Garavito's money laundering network was capable
of laundering millions of dollars in drug proceeds for drug traffickers
in Colombia.
The BCO and DAS/DEA
SIU executed ten search warrants and arrested eight principal Colombian
targets in this investigation. The arrests were effected pursuant to requests
for provisional arrest warrants issued by the Southern District of New
York. Searches were executed on primary residences and businesses belonging
to the targets. Numerous weapons and volumes of documents related to money
laundering activity were seized. Extradition of the defendants to the
United States is pending.
The SIU groups in
Colombia were also instrumental in the successful completion of Operation
Millennium, Operation Nueva Generacion and Operation Carga Mortal. Operation
Nueva Generacion resulted in the seizure of in excess of 9,000 kgs of
cocaine and 41 arrests while Operation Carga Mortal, conducted jointly
with several DEA offices and the DEA Special Operations Division (SOD),
resulted in the seizure of 45 kgs of heroin and 105 arrests.
Impact on Terrorist
Organizations
The DEA's presence
in source countries such as Colombia has served to ferret out significant
terrorist operatives involved in the drug trade. Cases developed by the
Bogota Country Office include the indictment of four members of the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), including the second-in-command of the
FARC, Jorge Briceño-Suarez, and Tomas Molina Caracas, the commander
of the 16th front of the FARC. One of the FARC defendants has been arrested
and is in U.S. custody. In addition, the Venezuela Country Office has
developed a case against leaders of Autodefenses Unidas de Colombia (AUC),
a Colombian paramilitary organization that, like the FARC, has been designated
by the State Department as a foreign terrorist organization. AUC leaders
indicted in the U.S. include Carlos Castaño-Gil, the head of the
AUC and one of his top commanders, Salvatore Mancuso. Even DEA's domestic
operations encounter drug trafficking organizations that have ties to
narco-terrorist groups.
- In November 2002,
in a joint DEA and FBI OCDETF investigation, Operation White Terror,
members of the AUC offered to exchange drugs for weapons. The defendants
were attempting to purchase Warsaw Pact-made weapons including shoulder-fired
anti-aircraft missiles, automatic rifles, 60 million rounds of ammunition,
grenades and rocket-propelled grenade launchers in exchange for the
cocaine. Four suspects were indicted in the Southern District of Texas
on charges of conspiring to distribute a controlled substance, and providing
material support to a terrorist organization (Title 18 of the U.S. Code,
Section 2339B). Two of those suspects waived extradition in Costa Rica
and were brought to the United States on December 20, 2002.
- On June 24, 2003,
one of the suspects, Carlos Ali Romero-Varela, pled guilty. His sentencing
hearing is scheduled for July 17, 2003. Also on that same date, another
suspect, Uwe Jensen, pled guilty; his sentencing hearing is scheduled
for September 18, 2003.
- On November 13,
2002, the U.S. Government announced that Jorge Briceño-Suarez
was named in a superseding indictment for his narcotics trafficking
activities. Jorge Briceño-Suarez commands the Eastern Bloc of
the FARC and is a member of the FARC Secretariat. As Eastern Bloc Commander,
Briceño-Suarez (direct superior of Tomas Molina-Caracas) is responsible
for the activities of four FARC Mini-Blocs that operate in the vast
eastern plains of Colombia.
- On September 24,
2002, the U.S. Government announced an indictment charging leaders of
the AUC with trafficking over seventeen tons of cocaine into the United
States and Europe beginning in early 1997. Charged in the indictment
are AUC leader Carlos Castaño-Gil, AUC military commander Salvatore
Mancuso, and AUC member Juan Carlos Sierra-Ramirez. According to the
indictment, Carlos Castaño-Gil directed cocaine production and
distribution activities in AUC-controlled regions of Colombia.
- March 7, 2002,
FARC 16th Front Commander Tomas Molina-Caracas and several of his Colombian
and Brazilian criminal associates were indicted in the District of Columbia
for conspiring to manufacture and distribute cocaine with the intent
and knowledge that it would be illegally imported into the United States.
In June 2002, Surinamese authorities detained DEA fugitive Carlos Bolas;
a Colombian national and FARC member who was named in the March 2002
indictment. Shortly thereafter, DEA agents transported Bolas from Suriname
to the Washington D.C. area for arraignment in U.S. District Court.
This marked the first time that the U.S. indicted and arrested a member
of a terrorist organization involved in drug trafficking.
Intelligence Collaboration
in Colombia
In May 2003, the
Colombian Army Counter Drug (CD) Brigade and the Colombian National Police
conducted a joint operation for the first time in the Department of Narino,
Colombia. As a result of this coordinated enforcement operation, over
4 tons of cocaine HCl, tons of precursor chemicals, and several laboratories
were seized and destroyed. The success of this operation was a direct
result of intelligence provided by the BCO. Furthermore, DEA leadership
led to the first ever joint operations between the (CD) Brigade Colombian
and the CNP. This is a significant enhancement in the level of cooperation
between these two Colombian organizations.
Peru: A Key to
Counternarcotics Efforts
Peru is the second
largest cocaine producer in the world and a major exporter of cocaine
HCl and cocaine base in South America. Peruvian cocaine and cocaine base
is primarily distributed to markets in the United States, South America,
Mexico, and many countries in Europe and Asia. In addition, Peru legally
produces cocaine base for sanctioned United States and European companies.
Peru also exports metric ton quantities of coca leaf for medical and commercial
consumption in the United States. Another area of focus are the controls
over chemicals utilized to process cocaine as well as methamphetamine.
Apart from consistent
coca cultivation and the resulting cocaine production threat, an increasing
international concern has been the steady emergence of opium poppy cultivation
in Peru. This illicit activity has resulted in a significant increase
in opium latex trafficking, as evidenced by the rise in latex seizures
by the Peruvian National Police (PNP). DEA Intelligence indicates that
opiate trafficking in Peru, including opium poppy cultivation, the production
of opium latex, and morphine is primarily concentrated in the northern
and central parts of the country, with poppy cultivation also sited in
the Huallaga Valley.
|
PERUVIAN
DRUG SEIZURES (2001 & 2002)1
|
|
COCA
|
2001
|
2002
|
|
Eradication
(ha)
|
3,900
|
7,134
|
|
Net
Cultivation (ha)
|
34,000
|
36,600
|
|
SEIZURES
|
|
|
|
Coca
Leaf (mt)
|
13.8
|
25.7
|
|
Cocaine
Base (mt)
|
5.71
|
8.7
|
|
Cocaine
HCl (mt)
|
2.77
|
3.7
|
|
Heroin
(mt)
|
.004
|
.014
|
Cocaine
Historically, Peru
supplied most of the cocaine base used in Andean cocaine production, but
Peru now ranks second to Colombia in terms of both coca leaf cultivation
and cocaine production. Due to sustained eradication and interdiction
efforts in the past, coca cultivation in Peru dropped from 115,000 hectares
in 1995 to 36,600 hectares in 2002. Accordingly, Peru's estimated potential
cocaine production has decreased by 68 percent in recent years, from 460
metric tons in 1995 to 140 metric tons in 2002. Approximately 1,604 hectares
have been eradicated during 2003.
Coca Eradication
Efforts
Eradication essentially
has been stalled since cocalero (coca farmer) protests in February and
March 2003 led the Peruvian Government to issue a presidential decree
that suspended eradication operations in most of the principal coca growing
areas. Accordingly, the counter-drug successes achieved in recent years
are at risk of being reversed. Peruvian Government information indicates
that prices for Peruvian coca leaf have increased. U.S. Crime and Narcotics
Center (CNC) estimates indicate that some Peruvian coca farmers are replanting
coca fields they had previously abandoned.
Heroin
Because of an emerging
opium trafficking threat, the DEA Lima Country Office (LCO) in concert
with the PNP, formed a "Special Opium Group." The group is comprised
of ten members of the PNP dedicated full-time to opium latex and morphine
investigations, and is supported by members of the SIU. The focus of the
group is to produce strategic and tactical intelligence specifically related
to the identification of criminal organizations dedicated to trafficking
opium products, identification of zones of opium cultivation and suspected
morphine conversion laboratories, and routes used to transport opium and
its derivatives to neighboring countries.
Chemical Controls
Peruvian chemical
control laws are inadequate to effectively curb the unrestricted importation
and distribution of the multi-ton quantities of essential chemicals required
to process cocaine. However, with DEA support through Operation Seis Fronteras,
the PNP has seized over 610 metric tons of essential chemicals since January
of this year, compared with the 510 metric tons seized in all of 2002.
Furthermore, U.S. Embassy in Lima and the Government of Peru have established
a bilateral interagency group to address the broader issue of chemical
control.
During Operation
Seis Fronteras IV, conducted in September-October 2002, the Peruvian Anti-Narcotics
Chemical Control Unit seized over 300,000 metric tons of precursor chemicals.
In response to the success of Seis Fronteras, and to enhance Government
of Peru counter-narcotics policy, Peru recognized the importance of monitoring
chemical importation, hazardous chemical storage and handling, and chemical
training for the PNP. The government has requested DEA assistance to coordinate
this effort. Contact and coordination with DEA's Office of Diversion Control
and the Office of Forensic Sciences has resulted in the establishment
of a DEA team which will meet with Government of Peru chemical and hazardous
waste experts later this year.
Airbridge Denial
Program
During the early
1990s, Peru led the Andean region in the production of coca leaf and cocaine
base, although the processing of each into cocaine HCl largely occurred
in Colombia. To accomplish the processing in Colombia, traffickers transported
large quantities of cocaine base from Peru to Colombia via aircraft. The
flight path most commonly utilized by these traffickers became known as
the "airbridge." The Peruvian Government subsequently initiated
an interdiction program in an attempt to address the threat posed by these
flights.
In 1995, the United
States began providing intelligence support to assist the Peruvian interdiction
efforts. These interdiction efforts and an aggressive eradication program
contributed to a decline in the cultivation of coca and the potential
cocaine base production. However, between 1997 and the suspension of the
program in 2001, traffickers undertook increased actions intended to thwart
the Peruvian efforts. The Peruvian Air Force's only successful interception
of a trafficker occurred during January 2001. The U.S. Government suspended
support of this program during April 2001, following the mistaken "shootdown"
of a missionary aircraft. Preparations to restart U.S. support to Peru's
air interdiction program continue under National Security Council directives.
DEA has no active role in the development, management, or reestablishment
of the Airbridge Denial Program, but will participate in providing intelligence
information to support the initiative in accordance with National Security
Council guidance.
Riverine Program
Established in 1997,
the Riverine Program is the only program specifically designed to target
trafficking of narcotics and precursor chemicals along South American
waterways. The Riverine Program's most significant achievements have been
the construction of the Riverine Training School, maintenance facilities,
and the Peruvian National Police forward operating base along the Amazon
River.
Peruvian Sensitive
Investigative Units
There are two SIUs
throughout five different regions that consist of 135 foreign law enforcement
officials vetted, trained, equipped, and guided by the DEA in Peru. The
SIU Program has conducted investigations that led to the dismantling of
the Cachique-Rivera organization and the arrest of two major drug traffickers.
These units also conducted an investigation that lead to the seizure of
1,760 kgs of cocaine, the dismantling of a cocaine processing lab, and
the arrest of 27 individuals. In monitoring organizations with a role
in the increased Peruvian opium cultivation, the SIUs have been instrumental
in assisting the DEA with targeting this activity.
On June 7, 2002,
the LCO, the Peruvian National Police Illicit Drug Trafficking Division
(DITID), and the LCO Sensitive Investigative Unit along with coordination
from the DEA Special Operations Division, Miami Division, Bogota Country
Office and Mexico Country Office, culminated a six month investigation
of Nelson Paredes-Ortiz. The investigation targeted a cocaine smuggling
organization comprised of Colombian, Guatemalan, Mexican and Peruvian
violators. The LCO, DITID, and SIU conducted an investigation that led
to the seizure of 1,760 kilograms of cocaine, a fuel truck, $18,000 in
U.S. Currency, one 9mm-hand gun, a fully operational cocaine conversion
laboratory, and the arrest of 28 defendants. The laboratory was believed
to be capable of producing 600 kilograms of cocaine weekly.
Conclusion
DEA's enforcement
strategy incorporates close coordination with source countries to increase
risks for traffickers, decrease availability of drugs in this country,
and build successful prosecutions of international traffickers. In addition
to substantial seizures and prosecutions that have disrupted the domestic
and international drug market, our collaborations have established confidence
within the ranks of source country law enforcement, resulting in an increasing
flow of intelligence.
DEA has achieved
success in numerous operations and initiatives that were only a vision
just several years ago. As we continue to work diligently abroad with
our source country counterparts, the DEA will continue to employ its Priority
Targeting apparatus to attack the most formidable trafficking organizations
and deprive them of the financial resources that potentially fuel violence,
corruption, and terrorism.
Successful endeavors
such as Operation Seis Fronteras, the SIU Program, the arrest of Osiel
Cardenas in Mexico, Operation Rebound in Colombia, and the indictments
related to the Arellano-Felix Organization exemplify the encouraging prospects
of DEA's source country initiatives. More important, perhaps, are the
lasting effects that these efforts will have on the nurturing of strong,
professional law enforcement institutions throughout the world.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I will be happy to respond to any questions the committee may have.
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