News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 15, 2006
Contact: DEA Public Affairs
202-307-7977
First
Mexican Law Enforcement Officials Graduate
From DEA Academy Anti-Meth Training in U.S.
Officers receive vital methamphetamine safety
training
(Quantico,
VA)— On September 7, 2006, DEA completed its first ever clandestine
methamphetamine laboratory safety training class for Mexican law enforcement
officers conducted at the DEA Training Academy in Quantico, VA. Forty-nine
officers from the Mexican-based Federal Preventive Police (PFP) and
6 prosecutors from the Federal Organized Crime Division Prosecutors
(SIEDO) received a month-long course as part of the anti-methamphetamine
initiative announced in May at the National Methamphetamine and Chemicals
Initiative (NCMI) Strategy Conference by Attorney General Alberto R.
Gonzales.
“With this
graduation, both the United States and Mexico take a big step forward
in our fight against meth,” said DEA Administrator Karen P. Tandy. “DEA
happily shared our expertise with our partners—better equipping
Mexican law enforcement in our historic effort to jointly combat meth
production and trafficking that is devastating both nations. We look
forward to hearing about their successes soon.”
As numerous states
and the Federal government have recently enacted legislation to restrict
access to pseudoephedrine, the main ingredient in the manufacturing
of methamphetamine, large scale production of methamphetamine has become
an increasing problem in Mexico. Today, approximately 80% of the methamphetamine
consumed in the United States is manufactured by Mexican controlled
drug trafficking organizations based in the U.S and Mexico.
At
the NMCI conference in May, Attorney General Gonzalez and Administrator
Tandy were joined by Mexican Attorney General Daniel Cabeza De Vaca
and Office of National Drug Control Policy Director John Walters as
the Attorney General unveiled Department of Justice-led initiatives
aimed at addressing aggressive enforcement, increased law enforcement
training, expanded information-sharing, and increased public awareness
both domestically and with U.S./Mexico anti-trafficking efforts.
The training is
part of a larger agreement between DEA and the Government of Mexico
(GOM) to establish specialized methamphetamine enforcement teams on
both sides of the border. In Mexico, these Mexican enforcement teams
will focus on investigating and targeting the most wanted Mexican methamphetamine
drug trafficking organizations in five meth hot spots in the Mexican
states of Sinaloa, Michoacan, Jalisco, Sonora, and Baja California
Norte.
The PFP, with a
staff of 22,000, is responsible for the highways, airports and seaports
in Mexico. By providing training to DEA’s Mexican counterparts
DEA will help the GOM identify every step necessary for the production
and manufacture of meth, as well as assist them in effectively dismantling
meth labs, which are a threat to the community and environment. The
identification of precursor chemicals is another necessary step in
the investigation of meth trafficking organizations – without
the chemicals the trafficking organizations can’t produce the
drug.
The training covered
the latest techniques in clandestine lab detection, enforcement, chemical
identification.
In addition, since
July 2006, DEA has trained over 300 Mexican officials in Mexico City
on precursor chemical investigations and clan lab familiarization.
This training will continue into October 2006, with an additional 50
Mexican officers.
DEA-led efforts
on the U.S. side will focus on the methamphetamine traffickers and
organizations transporting and distributing the finished methamphetamine
being produced in Mexico, and attacking the money-laundering operations
of these organizations.
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