Pubdate: Tue, 07 Aug 2012
Source: Las Vegas Sun (NV)
Copyright: 2012 Las Vegas Sun, Inc
Contact:  http://www.lasvegassun.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/234
Author: Jackie Valley

Law Enforcement:

MEXICAN DRUG CARTELS TRY TO ESTABLISH DIRECT TIES IN LAS VEGAS, OFFICIALS SAY

Mexican cartels are working to establish a direct foothold in Las 
Vegas to sell drugs here and use the region as a stepping stone to 
shipping large quantities of drugs to the East, law enforcement officials say.

The vast majority of drugs entering the region still come via 
long-established routes through Phoenix or Southern California and 
are overseen by middlemen. But with greater frequency, traffickers 
here are ordering drugs directly from cartels in Mexico, enforcement 
officers have found.

"There's no denying that these cartels are slowly inching themselves 
into our community," said Lt. Laz Chavez of Metro Police's narcotics section.

Two years ago, for instance, Kent Bitsko, executive director of a 
Nevada-based interagency drug task force, testified before a U.S. 
Senate subcommittee that several degrees of separation still existed 
between the region's drug traffickers and Mexican cartels. At the 
time, he could find only four or five cases over a three-year period 
with such ties.

Bitsko told the Sun that in the past 18 months, authorities have 
investigated five cases with direct cartel involvement.

"The only time we will say cartel involvement is when they have the 
ability to call directly to Mexico and arrange their narcotics to 
come up here," he said.

The deliveries from Mexico include cocaine, heroin, marijuana and 
methamphetamine, typically transported by vehicle in hidden 
compartments, Bitsko said.

Last year, task forces seized more than $66 million in drugs in 
Southern Nevada, more than double the amount seized in 2010, 
according to authorities.

Nevada's local, state, tribal and federal drug task forces reeled in 
several large-scale drug busts last year, including 473 pounds of 
cocaine found aboard an 18-wheeler on Interstate 15. Authorities said 
methamphetamine continues to be the top drug threat to Southern 
Nevada, with several cases tied directly to Mexico. Task forces 
seized 559 pounds of methamphetamine last year compared with 314 
pounds in 2010, according to the report.

"We've done search warrants on homes and found (more than) 100 pounds 
of meth," Chavez said. "There's no way that much can be sold just in 
Las Vegas."

Authorities suspect Mexican drug cartels are sending splinter groups 
- -- associates but not cartel leaders -- to the Las Vegas area to, as 
Chavez puts it, "test the waters."

They're purchasing homes and own enough vehicles to operate in the 
region, all funded by money from the cartels, he said. Chavez said he 
thinks that as these associates attempt to set up shop, they're 
keeping an eye on police activity -- in other words, "how much they 
can get away with."

That's where the task forces come into play. Drug-trafficking 
activity has made Southern Nevada law enforcement teams just as busy 
as their counterparts in larger metropolitan areas such as Los 
Angeles, Chavez said.

The investigative process works similar to a domino effect with the 
identification of drug sellers, their bosses and ultimately the head 
of a regional cell, Bitsko said. The task forces are working to build 
cases against organization cells, not individuals.

"We don't consider it a success unless we can get eight or 10 or 15 
of the people who are running the organization," Bitsko said.

Many of the people arrested are Mexican nationals living here 
illegally, Bitsko said. There's not one cartel running Southern 
Nevada, though. Authorities have come across drug traffickers with 
direct connection to the Sinaloa, La Familia and the Knight of Templar cartels.

The technology drug traffickers possess creates a constant challenge 
for investigators battling their influence in the region.

"The cartels have an endless budget," Chavez said. "Obviously, we don't."

Above all, authorities hope violence associated with cartels -- 
47,000 people have died in drug-related crimes in Mexico -- doesn't 
spill into the Las Vegas Valley.

"Is that coming?" Bitsko said. "I don't know."

Other U.S. cities, including Phoenix and San Diego, have seen an 
increase in cartel-related kidnappings, Bitsko said.

"We just want to do whatever we can to keep that from happening," Chavez said.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom