Pubdate: Fri, 26 May 2006 Source: East Valley Tribune (AZ) Section: Page A-21 Copyright: 2006 East Valley Tribune. Contact: http://www.eastvalleytribune.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2708 Author: Bill Richardson, Retired Mesa master police officer DEALING WITH DRUGS Instead Of Seizing Cars And Cash, Lawmakers And Law Enforcement Should Focus On Crushing The Mexican Cartels "The kingpins of this hemisphere's drug trade are no longer Colombians. Mexican cartels have leveraged the profits from their delivery routes to wrest control from the Colombian producers. The shift is also because of the success authorities have had in cracking down on Colombia's kingpins. As a result, Mexican drug lords are calling the shots in what the United Nations estimates is a $142 billion a year business in cocaine, heroin, marijuana, methamphetamine, and illicit drugs on U.S. streets." -- The Christian Science Monitor Aug. 16 That's a lot of money -- $142 billion-- being made off of the dope business in America. Estimates are that the northern Mexican cartels alone make between $10 billion and $20 billion by selling South American cocaine, homegrown heroin, marijuana and homemade meth to American customers and smuggling illegals across the Mexico-U.S. border. According to a Feb. 16 story in the Dallas Morning News, Mexican crime lords are gearing up for the increased border security that's designed to slow the flow of illegals into the U.S. And we all know most of them enter the U.S. via Arizona. Small Take Will a wall, multimillion-dollar electronic sensors from Arizona and federal governments, National Guard and U.S. Border Patrol really stop the cartels from making billions of dollars off of the United States? It's never worked before, why would it this time? Two weeks ago, Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard announced the state's latest efforts at taking on Mexican cartels. Following a plan of attack he and Gov. Janet Napolitano concocted as their way to go after cross-border crime while getting maximum election year publicity, Goddard announced the seizure of ill-gotten cash and assets. To hear Goddard tell it, you'd have thought his army of police officers had seized billions. "We're going to go after the leaders anyway we can to take their houses, jewelry, clothes if possible, cars, every asset that they have," he boasted. In reality, he got $600,000. He went on to say that Arizona authorities had seized a grand total of $17 million over the past six years. If the cartels were only making $10 billion a year, Goddard's sixyear seizure record of $17 million nipped them for roughly .0017 percent of a single year's profit. Add this into the equation: It's estimated that 4,000 illegal immigrants enter Arizona daily and pay as much as $2,000 apiece to the Mexican mob to be smuggled into our state. These guys are making billions and billions of dollars. How To Win The War Do our elected and law enforcement officials really think they're breaking the backs of the Mexican cartels and scaring them away from doing business in Arizona? Are they that naive? Goddard's goal of "taking every asset they have" is a sad commentary on what our state's chief law enforcement officer really knows about the cartel billionaires who continually demonstrate their lack of respect and fear for our government and their contempt for our laws. Even with an occasional arrest of purported coyotes or local "highlevel" drug dealers, the cartel's brains and cash are tucked safely away south of the border with the blessing and protection of the Mexican government. A 1996 San Francisco Chronicle article said Mexican drug lords were spending more than $500 million dollars a year to bribe corrupt Mexican officials. Today's estimates are they pay out $1 billion. According to the 2003 report "Organized Crime and Terrorist Activity in Mexico, 1999-2003" by the Library of Congress' Federal Research Division, there are three major drug cartels in Mexico supported by a half-dozen smaller cartels. Mexico is also home to Russian and Asian organized crime families. Then there's that thing about terrorists in Mexico. At least one terrorist group has ties to one of the Mexico's biggest drug cartels. Seizing cash and assets was the plan that was supposed to win the war on drugs. We know how that turned out; we lost. While cops and politicians grab up drug money and make press releases, the Mexican cartels have grown at such a profitable rate that it makes stockbrokers wish they'd start trading on Wall Street. The Mexican cartels invade and attack us daily and they get away with it. President Bush, Napolitano, Goddard, our congressional delegation and law enforcement appointees tout their plans for the war on drugs and immigrant smuggling. But if they don't take the war into Mexico and topple the cartels and destroy the corruption in the Mexican government, we're going to lose this war, too. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman