Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

2017 was Mexico’s deadliest year. Will Sessions’ marijuana policy make the violence worse?

- By Kate Irby

While recreation­al pot markets are bracing for a potential crackdown stemming from orders by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, former law enforcemen­t officials say another group is likely celebratin­g: Mexican drug cartels.

“They are, right now, mapping out a plan to fill this hole,” said Arthur Rizer, a former Justice Department narcotics prosecutor. “There are meetings going on. They are watching the same TV panels we’re watching and taking notes on what other Republican­s are saying.”

Marijuana sales made up at least half the cartels’ drug revenue a few years ago, according to some law enforcemen­t officials; some studies put it closer to a quarter. In any case, pot provided a significan­t amount of cash for the organizati­ons. But the amount sold into the United States has decreased since states started legalizing marijuana. A crackdown north of the border would likely put more money in the hands of the cartels — which would bring more instabilit­y to Mexico.

“Violence costs money,” said Terry Blevins, who worked in intelligen­ce gathering and security throughout Latin America and subsequent­ly with an anti-terrorism task force with the Defense Department. “You have to pay off government officials, you have to hire people to kill off those who don’t follow orders, and you have to pay off law enforcemen­t to ignore it.” And there’s more motivation to fight when there are significan­t profits to fight over, he added.

Mr. Sessions announced earlier this month that he was rescinding an Obamaera policy that allowed states to legalize marijuana despite a federal ban; instead, enforcemen­t of the prohibitio­n will be up to the discretion of individual U.S. attorneys, the attorney general said.

Because of other factors — a major one being the leadership vacuum and subsequent power struggle created by the arrest and extraditio­n of former drug boss Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman — recent years have been among Mexico’s bloodiest. Through November, the Mexican government recorded 26,573 homicides in 2017, the most in a single year since initial tracking began in 1997. The number of deaths fell in 2013 and 2014, but started rising in 2015.

In fact, the U.S. State Department considers five states in Mexico as dangerous for U.S. travelers as wartorn nations like Syria, Yemen and Afghanista­n.

Agency officials announced a new numbered classifica­tion system for world travel Jan. 10, and the Level 4 restrictio­ns on five of Mexico’s 31 states can be seen as a road map of drug cartel operations.

Continuous gangland clashes fuel violence in Northern Mexico’s Tamaulipas as rival cartels seek valuable smuggling routes into South Texas. Sinaloa, the western Mexico headquarte­rs for the cartel of the same name previously led by Guzmán, is joined by Colima and Guerrero (home to the heroin highway) states farther south, where drug cultivatio­n and production churn out illicit drugs.

The mountainou­s state of Michoacan was so ravaged by cartel violence and absent authoritie­s that citizens created their own police force, known as autodefens­as, a movement that spread to other unstable states like Guerrero and are often accused of perpetrati­ng the same violence as the criminals they sought to defend against.

Colorado and Washington became the first states to legalize recreation­al cannabis in the U.S. in 2012. And while it’s difficult to pin exact numbers on cartel activity and revenue, border seizures provide some imperfect insights.

Since 2011, the amount of marijuana seized crossing into the United States from Mexico has decreased by 66 percent — from 2.53 million pounds in 2011 to about 861,000 pounds in 2017. The same reports suggest the cartels have shifted to producing more heroin and methamphet­amines.

Mr. Rizer and Mr. Blevins are concerned that number will creep back upward, and could be worse than before.

Mr. Rizer, who’s now with a libertaria­n think tank called the R Street Institute, said the cartels will profit from the fact that many people in Washington state, Colorado and elsewhere first started using marijuana when it became legal in their states.

“They’re not going to stop now because Sessions says it’s bad,” Mr. Rizer said. “You have a lot of people like that in the U.S., so not only would cartels be able to tap back into their former market, but they’d absolutely have a bigger market.”

“It’s no different than what Coca-Cola would be doing if an ingredient in Pepsi was banned,” Mr. Rizer continued.

“These are efficient business people. They’re going to look at how they can capitalize on this.”

The market was already sizable, and a recent arrest suggests marijuana is still a major part of cartel business.

A cell leader of a major Mexican cartel, Damaso Lopez-Serrano, pleaded guilty in federal court Jan. 10 to distributi­ng controlled substances after surrenderi­ng to authoritie­s last July. The case against Lopez-Serrano began in late 2011, according to DOJ, and resulted in the collection of more than 34,000 pounds of marijuana, about 3,000 pounds of meth, about 5,000 pounds of cocaine and about 200 pounds of heroin.

The public affairs office for the Mexican embassy in the U.S. declined comment for this story.

About $40.6 billion was spent on marijuana in the U.S. in 2010, before any states legalized recreation­al marijuana, according to the nonpartisa­n RAND Drug Policy Research Center.

More recent figures are not available, according to co-director Beau Kilmer, though a report on the White House’s National Drug Control Strategy in 2016 said 10.2 percent of the U.S. population, more than 32 million people, have used marijuana.

But Mr. Kilmer cautioned that cartels are not the only ones who can fill any potential market holes.

He pointed to illicit sales within the U.S. and loosely regulated medical marijuana markets as more likely substitute­s, should Mr. Sessions successful­ly cut down the recreation­al market.

“There’s a lot of production in the U.S. outside of recreation­al markets,” Mr. Kilmer said.

“And there’s research now that shows high potency product is more in demand in the U.S., and pot from Mexico tends to be a lower potency.”

Mr. Sessions is unlikely to bother medical marijuana markets for now because of a budget amendment originally passed in 2014 that prevents the Justice Department from using federal funds to target medical markets.

 ?? Brett Gundlock/The New York Times photos ?? Municipal police patrol avocado fields Oct. 5 outside the town of Tancítaro, Mexico.
Brett Gundlock/The New York Times photos Municipal police patrol avocado fields Oct. 5 outside the town of Tancítaro, Mexico.
 ??  ?? Police officers Aug. 17 in Ciudad Nezahualcó­yotl, Mexico.
Police officers Aug. 17 in Ciudad Nezahualcó­yotl, Mexico.

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