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Marijuana Shipments to the U.S.
'Nightline' Granted
Exclusive Access to U.S.
Drug Enforcement Officials,
Learns Mexican Drug
Cartels Trying to Expand
Marijuana Shipments to the
U.S. Exclusive
Access to
DEA Agents
Uncovers
Massive
MexicanDrug
Cartel
Shipments
A "Nightline" investigation has discovered
that Mexican cartels have recently been
trying to expand marijuana shipments into
the United States by the tens of thousands.
"Nightline" was granted exclusive and
unprecedented access to U.S. DEA agents
and Customs and Border Protection officers
who interdict, store and destroy tons of
marijuana.
Our investigation takes a look at the scale
and reach of the Mexican cartels who are
fueled by 25.8 million American marijuana
users.
Government investigators estimate that the
cartels have boosted their production by a
whopping 59 percent since 2003, leading
them to conclude that the Mexican
organizations "represent the single greatest
drug trafficking threat to the United States,"
an official said. Officials estimate that the
drug cartels' profits are between $18 and
$39 billion annually.
According to Mexican and U.S. officials
(who requested that their names and ranks
not be used), marijuana smuggling has
contributed to 35,000 deaths along the
border in the past five years.
These discoveries come on the heels of a
bill being introduced in the House by Reps.
Barney Frank (D-Mass.) and Ron Paul (R-
Texas) to remove the federal roadblock to
state marijuana reform.
"Nightline" was present in the midst of a
two-week stretch of U.S. officials'
destroying more than $100 million worth of
marijuana at two top-secret facilities in an
undisclosed location in the American
Southwest.
Watch the full report on "Nightline"
tonight at 11:35 p.m. ET
Our cameras rolled as Customs and Border
patrol agents stopped an 18-wheeler
carrying furniture. But an X-ray of the
pottery and wooden furniture inside the
cargo hold showed something else.
"We pried open the ottoman and we found
nine cylinder-shaped packages containing
marijuana," said Supervising Officer Alberto
Flores of Customs and Border protection.
Officers went to work slicing open more
than 100 ottomans that were packed with
900 containers of marijuana. There was
about 2,300 pounds of marijuana in this
one shipment -- more than a ton.
"Marijuana is the No. 1 cash crop for the
cartels in Mexico," said assistant special
DEA agent Mel Rodriguez. "The moneys,
the proceeds from the sale of the marijuana
ultimately go to finance other illegal
activities for the cartel, such as [the]
purchase of weapons and additional
resources."
"Additional resources" include funding
armies of criminals who have fought the
U.S. and Mexican governments.
U.S. officials use a variety of tools to find
contraband, including an army of agents,
Border Patrol's drug-sniffing dogs, mobile
X-ray machines, even special cameras to
slide down gas tanks to hunt for drugs.
"We find sometimes narcotics inside
batteries, inside carburetors, manifolds,
underneath dashes, inside air conditioning
compressors, inside tires, in the roof. I just
can't think of all the places we have found
them," said Port of Laredo acting director
Jose Uribe.
Drug lords use every tactic to transport
drugs, cash and guns: submarines, tunnels,
ultra-light planes. They also still use men
on foot -- so-called "mules."
After U.S. agents seize the drugs, they are
moved into a secret facility -- one of the
most restricted government rooms in the
nation that, until now, no television
journalist had ever been allowed in before.
We had to sign papers just to walk from
room to room, and no employee working
there could be identified in our report.
U.S. Officials Burn Several Tons of
Marijuana Siezed From Mexican Drug
Cartels
About $59 million worth of marijuana and
every other drug you can imagine being
captured coming in from Mexico is stored
in this secret vault: cocaine, crystal
methamphetamine, heroin. An agent
pointed to a pack of 31 pounds of black tar
heroin. "Estimated street value about $1
million," he said.
We were granted a ride-along with a DEA
caravan transporting confiscated drugs,
with armed guards behind the wheel.
Assistant special DEA agent Mel Rodriguez
explained that the particular load we were
traveling with was 320 pounds of drugs that
was passed off to the DEA by Border
patrol.
"They encountered six individuals who had
just crossed over with duffel bags," he
explained. "As soon as Border patrol
approached them, they wound up dropping
the duffel bags and jumping back into the
river and swimming back to Mexico."
At some point the U.S. government has to
destroy the drugs. DEA officers took
"Nightline" inside another top-secret
location where the agency was in the
process of destroying 50,000 pounds, or 25
tons, of marijuana. Just like with the other
vault, we were not allowed to disclose its
location nor identify who worked there.
The vault is well protected with cement and
steel. Surveillance cameras are everywhere,
not to mention the throngs of armed DEA
agents all over the place. Each cache of
marijuana must be accounted for and is
given a number as it is brought inside.
There is so much marijuana in the facility
that the drugs have to be moved by a
forklift.
When it is time to destroy a haul, the
marijuana is carried by forklift, then
dumped into a large shredder before being
fed into two huge incinerators and burned
at more than 1,800 degrees. Some of the
agents have even nicknamed the
incinerators Dorothy and Bong 1.
After the marijuana is burned to ash, it is
placed into barrels. Only steam from the
heat of the incinerators is released into the
atmosphere as millions and millions of
drugs go up in smoke. 'Nightline' Granted
Exclusive Access to U.S.
Drug Enforcement Officials,
Learns Mexican Drug
Cartels Trying to Expand
Marijuana Shipments to the
U.S.
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