USA TODAY International Edition

Drug cartels switch gears as U.S. pot laws ease

Mexican farmers shift to profitable opium poppies

- David Agren Special to USA TODAY

CHIHUAHUA, Mexico – As more U.S. states legalize the use of marijuana, Mexico’s violent drug cartels are turning to the basic law of supply and demand.

That means small farmers, or campesinos, in this border state’s rugged Sierra Madre who long planted marijuana to be smuggled into the United States are switching to opium poppies, which bring a higher price. The opium gum harvested is processed into heroin to feed the ravaging U.S. opioid crisis.

“Marijuana isn’t as valuable, so they switched to a more profitable product,” said Javier Ávila, a Jesuit priest in this region rife with drug cartel activities.

Laws allowing recreation­al marijuana in states including Colorado, Washington and California are causing shifts in the Mexican underworld that have also led to increased violence as the cartels move away from the cash cow of marijuana to traffic more heroin and methamphet­amines.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection statistics show that marijuana seizures fell by more than half since 2012, while heroin and methamphet­amine seizures have held steady or markedly increased.

The switch in illegal drugs coincides with Mexico hitting a record 29,168 murders in 2017, the most since the country started keeping homicide statistics in 1997. The jump in violence stems from several factors: cartels splinterin­g into smaller factions, power struggles within the formidable Sinaloa Cartel after leader Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán was arrested and extradited to the U.S., and the rise of the violent Jalisco New Generation Cartel, which expanded nationally and moved in on El Chapo’s turf.

Few attribute Mexico’s rising violence just to legalized marijuana north of the border, but the shift is causing problems here. In Chihuahua, state prosecutor César Peniche said criminal groups on Mexico’s Pacific Coast used to traffic marijuana to California. Now those groups are “looking for other routes to continue their traffickin­g” by using border crossings farther inland, he said.

“Criminal groups … enter the state of Chihuahua, and this causes confrontat­ions,” Peniche said. “It’s creating conflicts between criminal organizati­ons to win control of the routes because some markets have closed, but others have stayed open. This sparks violence.”

In Mexico’s heroin-producing heartland of southern Guerrero state, the violence is so bad that the morgues are full and unable to handle all the bodies brought in for autopsies.

The U.S. government recently toughened its travel warning to Americans against visiting Guerrero, which includes the tourist resorts of Acapulco and Ixtapa, in addition to remote villages that rely on planting opium poppies.

Growers in Guerrero, like those in northwest Mexico, also moved away from marijuana to focus on opium poppies. And they have no problem selling their harvests.

“In talking with middlemen and others (selling illegal drugs), the U.S. has an almost insatiable demand . ... The cartels are never sitting on product,” said Myles Estey, producer of the Showtime series The Trade, which filmed in Guerrero.

He said the cartels “saw a lot more demand for heroin (in the United States) and responded.”

The cartels also freelance in nondrug crimes, such as kidnapping and extortion, to make quick money and “meet payroll” for their foot soldiers, said Guerrero state government spokesman Roberto Álvarez Heredia.

Álvarez also blames Mexico’s northern neighbor for Guerrero’s increased violence, saying it stems from lax U.S. gun laws and “a public health problem from the consumptio­n of heroin.”

“Guerrero’s problem is not a problem originatin­g in the (Mexican) state. It’s a problem linked to what happens in the United States,” Álvarez said.

 ?? USA TODAY ?? Parker McMillan shops at MedMen in West Hollywood on Jan. 1, when California’s legal pot market opened.
USA TODAY Parker McMillan shops at MedMen in West Hollywood on Jan. 1, when California’s legal pot market opened.
 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Bodies lie on the sidewalk in Acapulco, in Mexico’s Guerrero state, on Feb. 15. They were killed in a wave of violence amid cartel infighting.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES Bodies lie on the sidewalk in Acapulco, in Mexico’s Guerrero state, on Feb. 15. They were killed in a wave of violence amid cartel infighting.

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