Mexican Cartel Activity In U.S. Exaggerated, Experts Claim

By admin August 26, 2013 15:58
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testTwo years ago, the now-defunct National Drug Intelligence Center (NDIC)  released a shocking report that stated that Mexico’s drug trafficking  organizations – including the notorious Sinaloa Cartel and Los Zetas – were  active in more than 1,000 U.S. cities.

The report sparked headlines across the nation and outrage from activists and  lawmakers, including Arizona Sen. John McCain, who spoke of his concern during a  2012 Armed Services Committee hearing.

The numbers tallied by the NDIC, however, may be exaggerated, according to  law enforcement officials and police experts interviewed by  The Washington Post, as  the report was based primarily on self-reporting by local police agencies and  not documented criminal cases involving Mexican cartels.

“They say there are Mexicans operating here and they must be part of a  Mexican drug organization,” Peter Reuter, who co-directed the research for the  nonprofit think tank Rand and now works as a professor at the University of  Maryland, told the Post. “These numbers are mythical, and they keep  getting reinforced by the echo chamber.”

The NDIC shut its doors last year and was folded into the Drug Enforcement  Administration, which turned down a request by the Washington Post to  release the name of the cities where cartels operate – the matter was “law  enforcement sensitive,” the DEA said.

Using computer mapping techniques and government documents the Washington  Post found over a third of the cities listed in the NDIC report, including  about 20 in Montana, 25 in Oregon, 25 in Idaho and 30 in Arkansas. While the  cartels no doubt operate in many U.S. cities and about 90 percent of the  cocaine, heroin, marijuana and methamphetamine in the country can be sourced  back to Mexican drug trafficking organizations, policy experts still argue over  the reach of Mexico’s narcos in the U.S.

Some policy experts, however, argue that the ubiquitous dissemination of the  NDIC report makes it hard to discredit the numbers.

“Washington loves mythical numbers,” said John Carnevale, a former drug  policy and budget official who served three presidents and four “drug czars” at  the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. “Once the number is out  there and it comes from a source perceived to be credible, it becomes hard to  disprove, almost impossible, even when it’s wrong.”

Read more: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2013/08/26/mexican-cartel-activity-in-us-exaggerated-activists-claims/#ixzz2d5htpXRg

By admin August 26, 2013 15:58

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