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Thread: The War on Drugs

  1. #41
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    All the right people are profiting. "The War on Drugs" is big bidness.

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    Colombian drug cartel put a $70K bounty on drug dog...

    Colombian drug cartel put a $70K bounty on this dog
    July 27, 2018, A Colombian drug gang has out a $70,000 bounty on a police dog. Sombra or "Shadow" has sniffed out almost 10 tons of drugs in more than 300 operations. The K9's work has lead to 245 arrests.

    Intelligence sources say drug sniffing dog's record success has lead the Colombian cartel to put a 200m-peso ($70,000) price on its head, BBC News reports. The Urabeños gang responsible for the hit request is considered Colombia's most powerful criminal organization. Police have moved Sombra to ensure her safety.




    The six-year-old German shepherd is now stationed at the Bogotá Airport, which is much safer than the gang's heartland, where she used to work with counter-narcotics forces. Police say she is accompanied by her usual handler as well as extra officers to improve her safety during her deployments.


    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/sombra-...ecord-success/

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    Quote Originally Posted by Lummy View Post
    The US "war on drugs" doesn't work and never has worked. It's a catch phrase that has been strongly associated with government bureaucratic growth and CIA criminal activities.

    It's the wrong approach to chase drug producers and sellers around the globe when the market for illegal drugs is so big in the US and other Western countries. The approach can't work. We need much more severe penalties for using drugs, including the death penalty.
    Wait...what, now? How will that solve anything?
    Faith can move mountains, but don't forget to bring your shovel.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Lummy View Post
    Beer, bourbon, scotch, vodka and corn liquor are okay. Wine is okay too.

    But those drugs ACTUALLY kill you. I have two grandparents who died from alcoholism. It ruined their lives, and frankly, affected the rest of us as well. So, why is that ok?
    Faith can move mountains, but don't forget to bring your shovel.

  6. #45
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    Quote Originally Posted by Adelaide View Post
    That's true. There is a significant amount of money put towards law enforcement, for example, that is compeltely unreasonable. Then there is the cost of human life to consider. The many mass graves and the bodies hanging from overpasses in cities bordering the United States sort of shows an extreme example of that, but there are also American lives cost in the form of law enforcement and those involved in the drug trade.
    And people are still doing lots of drugs. Nothing has slowed the use or sale of drugs.
    Faith can move mountains, but don't forget to bring your shovel.

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    Quote Originally Posted by DLLS View Post
    Yes! One time I saw a joint and I intentionally set it on fire.
    Shiiiit. Did you inhale?
    Faith can move mountains, but don't forget to bring your shovel.

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    Coast Guard Cutter Offloads Cocaine, Marijuana in Port Everglades...

    Coast Guard Cutter Offloads Cocaine, Marijuana in Port Everglades
    3 Aug 2018 -- More than 5 tons of cocaine seized in international waters off the Eastern Pacific Ocean from early June to mid-July was offloaded by the crew of the Coast Guard Cutter Hamilton Wednesday in Port Everglades.
    The drugs were seized during the interdiction of five suspected smuggling vessels and the recovery of two floating bale fields found off the coasts of Mexico, Central and South America by the Coast Guard cutters Hamilton (WMSL-753), Alert (WMEC-630), and Venturous (WMEC-625). Hamilton was responsible for four cases, seizing an estimated 2,962 kilograms of cocaine. The cutter Alert was responsible for one case, seizing an estimated 2,253 kilograms of cocaine.


    The cutter Venturous was responsible for one case, seizing an estimated 616 kilograms of cocaine and 50 pounds of marijuana. "The men and women aboard Hamilton, and those on all of the cutters who intercepted these illicit drugs, epitomize excellence and dedication," said Cmdr. Eric Helgen, cutter Hamilton executive officer. "These cutter crews spend over half of the year deployed in the fight against transnational criminal organizations who spread misery throughout Central and South America. Without the service and sacrifice of our Coast Guard men and women, the criminals engaged in the transshipment of drugs like those on Hamilton's flight deck, would operate unchecked, ultimately threatening the safety and security of our borders."


    Bales of cocaine lie on a pallet onboard the Coast Guard Cutter Hamilton in Port Everglades, Aug. 1, 2018. The drugs were seized during the interdiction of five suspected smuggling vessels and the recovery of two floating bale fields found off the coasts of Mexico, Central and South America by Coast Guard Cutters Hamilton (WMSL-753), Alert (WMEC-630), and Venturous (WMEC-625).



    Numerous U.S. agencies from the Departments of Defense, Justice and Homeland Security cooperated in the effort to combat transnational organized crime. The Coast Guard, Navy, Customs and Border Protection, FBI, Drug Enforcement Administration, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement along with allied and international partner agencies play a role in counter-drug operations. The fight against transnational organized crime networks in the Eastern Pacific requires unity of effort in all phases from detection, monitoring, and interdictions, to criminal prosecutions by U.S. Attorneys in districts across the nation.


    The Coast Guard increased U.S. and allied presence in the Eastern Pacific Ocean and Caribbean Basin, which are known drug transit zones off of Central and South America, as part of its Western Hemisphere Strategy. During at-sea interdictions in international waters, a suspect vessel is initially detected and monitored by allied, military or law enforcement personnel coordinated by Joint Interagency Task Force-South based in Key West, Florida. The law enforcement phase of counter-smuggling operations in the Eastern Pacific is conducted under the authority of the 11th Coast Guard District, headquartered in Alameda, California. The interdictions, including the actual boarding, are led and conducted by members of the U.S. Coast Guard.


    Helgen added, "The tremendous cooperation and partnerships with countries throughout Central and South America continue to make a lasting impact in this fight" The cutter Hamilton is 418-foot national security cutter homeported in Charleston, South Carolina. The cutter Alert is 210-foot medium endurance cutter homeported in Astoria, Oregon. The cutter Venturous is also a 210-foot medium endurance cutter homeported in St. Petersburg, Florida.



    https://www.military.com/daily-news/...verglades.html

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    Coast Guard Delivers More Than 7 Tons of Seized Cocaine...

    Coast Guard Delivers More Than 7 Tons of Seized Cocaine
    AUGUST 10, 2018 - More than 7 tons of cocaine worth an estimated $211 million has arrived at Port Everglades.
    The U.S. Coast Guard cutter Mohawk made the delivery, early Thursday, after several missions in the eastern Pacific Ocean. Four Coast Guard cutters seized seven suspected drug smuggling vessels and recovered two floating bale fields off the coasts of Mexico, Central and South America in recent weeks, the Coast Guard said. They also seized a new boat designed to be stealthy, said Commanding Officer Bob Kinsey at a Port Everglades news conference. “A relatively new development is the use of low-profile go-fast vessels,” he said.



    The Coast Guard seized a low-profile go-fast boat that has powerful engines but floats mostly below the waterline and is painted sea-green to make it difficult to spot on the ocean.




    It looks like a high-speed cigarette boat with two powerful engines but floats mostly below the waterline and is painted sea green to make it difficult to spot on the ocean. “It’s very difficult to see,” Kinsey said. “We have a lot of professional pilots that are flying maritime patrols out there with the U.S. Navy, Royal Canadian Navy and others that are very helpful in spotting these vessels.” He said drug smugglers are very adaptable and inventive. “Never say never when you’re talking about traffickers,” he said. “They’re going to use technology (and) every advantage that they can get to subvert our maritime enforcement.”


    But, this latest drug seizure has an impact. “This is a significant hit to those traffickers,” Kinsey said. The Departments of Defense, Justice and Homeland Security joined with the Coast Guard, U.S. Navy, Customs and Border Protection, FBI, Drug Enforcement Administration, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement on the drug interdiction operations. “It’s truly a team effort,” he said.


    https://www.officer.com/investigations/drug-alcohol-enforcement/news/21017534/coast-guard-delivers-more-than-7-tons-of-seized-cocaine
    See also:


    Southern California Drug Raids Net Thousands of Pounds of Narcotics
    AUGUST 9, 2018 - Capping a three-year investigation, more than 250 law enforcement officials fanned out across Los Angeles, Santa Ana and several Inland Empire cities, arresting 22 people.
    Authorities arrested nearly two dozen people Wednesday in a series of drug raids across Southern California, disrupting a vast smuggling ring linked to Mexico’s notorious Sinaloa cartel that funneled hundreds of pounds of narcotics across the border using small aircraft and other means to cities throughout the United States. Capping a three-year investigation, more than 250 law enforcement officials fanned out across Los Angeles, Santa Ana and several Inland Empire cities, arresting 22 people, said Paul Delacourt, assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles field office. In all, 57 defendants were named in three indictments stemming from the case. Many of those named remain fugitives in Mexico, officials said.


    The case provided a rare glimpse into how one of Mexico’s most powerful drug organizations sends enormous quantities of narcotics over the border, using an Amazon-like network of warehouses and “stash houses” to distribute the contraband across the U.S., federal law enforcement officials said. “Operation Narconetas” targeted three separate drug organizations attached to the Sinaloa cartel and resulted in the seizure of roughly 850 pounds of methamphetamine, 93 pounds of heroin, 50 pounds of marijuana, nearly a ton of cocaine and approximately $1.42 million in drug money. Delacourt said the drug traffickers used a variety of vehicles with concealed compartments to hide the narcotics, as well as several small aircraft in an attempt to avoid detection at the U.S. border.



    Drug packages confiscated during Operation Narconetas in southern California.



    During a downtown news briefing Wednesday in Little Tokyo, Delacourt said the arrests and indictments had an immediate effect on cartel operations in the region, removing drugs from the streets and preventing violence. The raids included the FBI, Internal Revenue Service, Drug Enforcement Administration, Los Angeles Police Department and other agencies. Federal prosecutors said the operation also helped identify significant players in Mexican drug operations who continue to drive criminal enterprises in Southern California. “More than simply seizing large quantities of drugs and money, this investigation was able to identify the top-level, Mexican-based traffickers who directed the transactions, and who thought they were using secure communication devices to commit their crimes,” Tracy Wilkison, first assistant U.S. attorney in Los Angeles, said in a statement. “Our ability to obtain those communications continues to be an important part of our ability to solve these crimes.”


    In a border battle of wits, the Sinaloa cartel has historically sent drugs through the Calexico crossing to a labyrinth of traffickers in Southern California. Heavily armed tactical officers conducted Wednesday’s pre-dawn raids at houses in the Inland Empire communities of Perris, Hemet and Rialto. Federal prosecutors are seeking to force the forfeiture of several properties they charge were used to stash drugs. The indictments list a variety of drug trafficking and conspiracy charges that could result in federal prison sentences of a decade to life without parole. With easy routes to the border, Los Angeles and increasingly the Inland Empire are key distribution points for drug trafficking, officials said.


    MORE
    Last edited by waltky; 08-10-2018 at 07:54 PM.

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    U.S. and Mexico to set up joint team to fight drug cartels...

    U.S. and Mexico to set up joint team to fight drug cartels
    15 Aug.`18 - U.S. and Mexican law enforcement authorities will set up a joint team based in Chicago targeting the leaders and finances of drug cartels that ship opioids into the United States, aiming to stanch a spike in overdose deaths, officials said on Wednesday.
    DEA Chief of Operations Anthony Williams said at a joint news conference with Mexican government officials in Chicago that targeting cartel finances was key because “the sole purpose of these entities is one thing and one thing only - money.” Mexico remains the principal highway for cocaine to the United States and has become the top source of heroin, which is fuelling a surge in opioid addiction in the United States. It is also a major supplier of methamphetamines. “It’s not just a Chicago problem, it’s a national problem. Actually, it’s an international problem,” Brian McKnight, special agent in charge of the DEA’s Chicago Field Division, said at the news conference.


    Mexican President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, a left-leaning nationalist, has vowed to shake up Mexico’s war on drug cartels after he takes power in December. He wants to rewrite the rules, aides have said, suggesting negotiated peace and amnesties rather than a hardline strategy that critics say has only perpetuated violence. However, a change of direction without the United States could increase friction between the neighbours, who have been often at loggerheads since Donald Trump became U.S. president.


    Trump has irked Mexico with demands that it pay for a border wall and his comments that it does nothing to slow illegal immigration. He has also pushed to revamp the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) to favour the United States. But despite difference with the Trump administration on migration and trade issues, officials and security experts in the United States have applauded long-running bilateral efforts to crack down on drug gangs. For the past 12 years, Mexico has fought the violent cartels by deploying thousands of police, soldiers and intelligence officers.


    https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-afghanistan-redcross/taliban-withdraws-protection-from-red-cross-in-afghanistan-idUKKBN1L01W3

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    Quote Originally Posted by waltky View Post
    Colombian drug cartel put a $70K bounty on drug dog...

    Colombian drug cartel put a $70K bounty on this dog
    July 27, 2018, A Colombian drug gang has out a $70,000 bounty on a police dog. Sombra or "Shadow" has sniffed out almost 10 tons of drugs in more than 300 operations. The K9's work has lead to 245 arrests.


    So, all those dogs still inside animal shelters are set free that are good police dogs. All of the cats are set free to catch a mouse to see where the pathway leads to when they find it.
    Plant farms and animal sanctuaries with just compensation: Genesis 1:29-30, 2-3, Lev. 24:18-22, Psalm 50, Isaiah 1, 11:6-9, 65, 66, Daniel 1, Hosea 2:18, Revelation 20-22.

    Creation of horses: Zechariah 6:1-8, 14:20. Wild Horses, burros persecuted, parted out in violation of Public Law 92-195:
    https://twitter.com/WildHorseEdu

    Jesus was a Vegetarian: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dx6J6jh1Dzo

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