Pubdate: Sat, 04 Aug 2012 Source: Door County Advocate (WI) Copyright: 2012 Door County Advocate Contact: http://216.127.216.103/advocate/letters.html#writexx Website: http://www.doorcountyadvocate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1572 Author: Ramelle Bintz WHY HEROIN? A FEDERAL AGENT OFFERS AN OVERVIEW OF THE OPIATE TRADE The use of prescription opiate narcotics is on the rise by both the younger and older generation, said Will Taylor, who works as a special agent with the federal Drug Enforcement Administration out of Chicago. Taylor's job is to nab traffickers bringing heroin and other narcotics into Wisconsin and nearby states including Illinois and Indiana. As a drug, heroin is made from poppies and is similar to synthetic opiates such as oxycontin and oxycodone. Traffickers move drugs based on supply and demand, and as a prescription drug habit costs more to get high as tolerance levels increase, a hit of heroin is relatively inexpensive. "It's all about money. A hit of heroin in Chicago is $10 to $20," Taylor said. "A pill could be $15 to $30 per pill, but an addict is using many pills per day and using more to get the desired effect. Theoretically even if they are shopping insurance and going through a doctor, they are getting high substantially less. Heroin is much stronger - it takes hold very quickly." Prescription drugs have overtaken other drugs such as methamphetamine in popularity. The danger with heroin compared to prescription drugs is a user with a 30 mg pill knows how much is in there. "When they buy a bag of heroin, they have no idea if it is two or three times stepped or what it's cut with," he said. "The user never knows what they're getting. That's how we get clusters of overdoses. There is no consistency. There is no science to this. It goes from one town to another, and when it gets to northeastern Wisconsin you don't know how many times it's been cut, by whom, or how pure it is." The purity of heroin is analyzed every time a bust is seized, and it's never consistent, he said. A chemical analysis shows most heroin arriving in northeastern Wisconsin comes from poppies grown in South America - the Colombian and Bolivian heroin is produced for drug cartels that have partnerships with Mexican cartels, which then transport it across the border frequently with 18 wheelers. Most heroin from Afghanistan goes to Europe, rarely the U.S., he said. Europe is also seeing the same increase in heroin use and overdoses. Once in awhile there will be some from Laos or Burma, but virtually all of the heroin sold in Wisconsin is from South America. "It's pure logistics. Cartels have a stronghold on transportation, and their business plan for many years hasn't changed dramatically," Taylor said. "At the wholesale level they have distribution routes and safe houses just like any legitimate transportation company." The vehicles have hidden compartments and there are tractor-trailer trucks on the payroll of drug traffickers who have it concealed with legitimate loads - some is hidden in crates with avocados, for example, he said. It is virtually impossible to keep it from crossing the border into this country. When it arrives in Milwaukee or Chicago from Mexico, it is 80 to 90 percent pure, he said, and as it goes from dealer to dealer each steps it down, mixing it with a dietary supplement powder or other substance. A few years ago to cut costs, the cartel hired a chemist who was making Fentenyl, an opioid about 100 times more potent than morphine, and mixing it with heroin. That combination proved fatal and a lot of drug business was lost because so many addicts ended up dying. The end product is now several times stronger than it was 30 years ago, so that also accounts for an increase in deaths compared to previous generations. The stigma of being a heroin addict is also gone, Taylor said. Instead of being cooked or injected, most times it is being smoked or snorted. It could be a 40-year-old mother or the teenager next door who is using heroin, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt