Pubdate: Mon, 07 Apr 2014
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Page: A1
Copyright: 2014 The Washington Post Company
Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/mUgeOPdZ
Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491
Author: Nick Miroff

HEROIN SURGING NORTH OUT OF MEXICO SPREADS IN U.S.

As Changing State Laws Cut Pot Prices, Cartels Turn to Opium
Poppies

TEPACA DE BADIRAGUATO, MEXICO - The surge of cheap heroin spreading in
$4 hits across rural America can be traced back to the remote valleys
of the northern Sierra Madre.

With the wholesale price of marijuana falling - driven in part by
decriminalization in sections of the United States - Mexican drug
farmers are turning away from cannabis and filling their fields with
opium poppies.

Mexican heroin is flooding north as U.S. authorities trying to contain
an epidemic of prescription painkiller abuse have tightened controls
on synthetic opiates such as hydrocodone and OxyContin. As the pills
become more costly and difficult to obtain, Mexican trafficking
organizations have found new markets for heroin in places such as
Winchester, Va., and Brattleboro, Vt., where, until recently, needle
use for narcotics was rare or unknown.

Farmers in the storied "Golden Triangle" region of Mexico's Sinaloa
state, which has produced the country's most notorious gangsters and
biggest marijuana harvests, say they are no longer planting the crop.
Its wholesale price has collapsed in the past five years, from $100
per kilogram to less than $25.

"It's not worth it anymore," said Rodrigo Silla, 50, a lifelong
cannabis farmer who said he couldn't remember the last time his family
and others in their tiny hamlet gave up growing mota. "I wish the
Americans would stop with this legalization."

Growers from this area and as far afield as Central America are sowing
their plots with opium poppies, and large-scale operations are turning
up in places where authorities have never seen them.

In late January, police in Honduras made their first discovery of a
poppy farm in the country, raiding a sophisticated mountain greenhouse
as big as a soccer field. That same week, soldiers and police in
western Guatemala came under attack by farmers armed with clubs and
gas bombs when the security personnel moved in to destroy 160 acres of
poppy.

Along the border with Mexico, U.S. authorities seized 2,162 kilos of
heroin last year, a record amount, up from 367 kilos in 2007.

The needle habit in the United States has made a strong comeback as
heroin rushes into the country. Use of the drug in the United States
increased 79 percent between 2007 and 2012, according to federal data,
triggering a wave of overdose deaths and an "urgent and growing public
health crisis," Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. warned last month.

Although prescription painkillers remain more widely abused and
account for far more fatal overdoses, heroin has been "moving all over
the country and popping up in areas you didn't see before," said Carl
Pike, a senior official in the Special Operations Division of the Drug
Enforcement Administration.

With its low price and easy portability, heroin has reached beyond New
York, Chicago and other places where it has long been available. Rural
areas of New England, Appalachia and the Midwest are being hit
especially hard, with cities such as Portland, Maine; St. Louis; and
Oklahoma City struggling to cope with a new generation of addicts.

Pike and other DEA officials say the spread is the result of a shrewd
marketing strategy developed by Mexican traffickers. They have
targeted areas with the worst prescription pill abuse, sending heroin
pushers to "set up right outside the methadone clinics," one DEA agent
said.

Some new heroin users begin by snorting the drug. But like addicts of
synthetic painkillers who go from swallowing the pills to crushing and
snorting them, they eventually turn to intravenous injection of heroin
for a more powerful high. By then, experts say, they have crossed a
psychological threshold - overcoming the stigma of needle use. At the
same time, they face diminishing satisfaction from prescription pills
that can cost $80 each on the street and whose effects wear off after
four to six hours.

Those addicts are especially susceptible to high-grade heroin offered
for as little as $4 a dose but with a narcotic payload that can top
anything from a pharmacy.

A region's way of life

While Colombia has historically been the biggest source of heroin sold
in the United States, Mexican output has since surpassed it, DEA
officials say. Together, the two countries account for more than 90
percent of the U. S. heroin supply, and nearly all of it is smuggled
into this country by Mexican traffickers.

As seizures of cocaine and marijuana along the border have fallen over
the past several years, flows of methamphetamine and heroin have
soared, federal statistics show.

Mexico's Sinaloa drug cartel continues to be the biggest provider of
heroin to the United States, controlling as much as half of the North
American market. Sinaloa boss Joaquin "El Chapo" (Shorty) Guzman grew
up here in the mountains outside the municipal seat of Badiraguato,
and his organization remains the dominant criminal power along the
western border and west coast of Mexico.

Guzman was captured by Mexican authorities in February, but the drug
trade in the western Sierra Madre carries on without a hitch. Young
men with AK-47s, 9mm pistols and hand-held radios patrol the dirt
roads on four-wheelers, crisscrossing the mountains among dusty little
villages and ridgeline airstrips.

The entire region is a giant drug farm and has been for
decades.

"There's no other way to make a living here," said Silla, who has
brought up his sons in the business, as his father did before him.

Feeling confident after several years of good harvests, Silla and
other families here planted more poppies than ever this year, but
their radiant purple, red and white flowers were spotted by aerial
surveillance last month. Mexican soldiers in pickups came roaring up
the creek bed soon after and tore out the crop, chopping up irrigation
hoses and searching homes for guns and cash.

The Mexican military says that it destroyed 36,000 acres of opium
poppies last year, down from more than 40,000 in 2011. Mexican
officials have not explained the decline, but analysts say soldiers
are too busy battling cartels and patrolling cities, with less money
and manpower available for crop eradication.

A kilo of the raw, sticky opium sap that is used to make heroin sells
wholesale for $1,500 in the northern Sierra Madre, nearly double its
2012 price, according to growers. With fertilizer and favorable
weather, a well-tended poppy field can yield eight kilos of sap per
acre, nearly enough to make a kilo of raw heroin.

Opium poppies are also planted farther south in Mexican states such as
Michoacan, Guerrero and Oaxaca, where yields are significantly lower.

As the poppies flower, their bright green seedpods grow fat with milky
sap, and razor-wielding "rayadores" arrive to meticulously score the
pods and bleed them of the sap. The process takes several weeks, as
each pod can be sliced as many as six to eight times before it dries.

"If you cut too deep, you ruin it," said Ruperto Mercado, 40, who said
he learned to score Sierra Madre poppies soon after learning to walk
and has been doing the work seasonally ever since. At $30 or $40 a
day, it is the best-paid farm labor in northern Mexico.

After the sap turns brown and hardens on the pod, it is collected and
rolled into balls or cakes. Under proper conditions, it can be stored
for years, allowing growers to wait out price fluctuations.

Whatever "goma" (gum) the farmers harvest is sold to middlemen or
cartel lab operators, who slow-cook it in acetic anhydride, a widely
available chemical that smells like vinegar. After additional
processing with other agents, it is dried into powder or stirred into
a tar-like paste, then readied for transport.

Diversifying to survive

Unlike marijuana, which cartel peons usually carry across the border
in backpacks, heroin (like cocaine) is typically smuggled inside fake
vehicle panels or concealed in shipments of legitimate commercial
goods and is more difficult to detect. By the time it reaches northern
U.S. cities, a kilo may be worth $60,000 to $80,000, prior to being
diluted or "cut" with fillers such as lactose and powdered milk.

The increased demand for heroin in the United States appears to be
keeping wholesale prices high, even with abundant supply.

The Mexican mountain folk in hamlets such as this one do not think of
themselves as drug producers. They also plant corn, beans and other
subsistence crops but say they could never earn a living from their
small food plots.

And, increasingly, they're unable to compete with U.S. marijuana
growers. With cannabis legalized or allowed for medical use in 20 U.S.
states and the District of Columbia, more and more of the American
market is supplied with highly potent marijuana grown in American
garages and converted warehouses - some licensed, others not. Mexican
trafficking groups have also set up vast outdoor plantations on public
land, especially in California, contributing to the fall in marijuana
prices.

"When you have a product losing value, you diversify, and that's true
of any farmer," said David Shirk, a Mexico researcher at the
University of California at San Diego. "The wave of opium poppies
we're seeing is at least partially driven by changes we're making in
marijuana drug policy."  
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D