DEA
Offices & Telephone Nos.
Bakersfield661-396-3736
Carlsbad760-931-2666
Fresno559-487-5402
Imperial County760-355-0857
Los Angeles213-621-6700
Oakland510-637-5600
Redding530-246-5043
Riverside909-328-6000
|
Sacramento916-480-7100
San Diego858-616-4100
San Francisco415-436-7900
San Jose408-291-7235
San Ysidro619-671-4500
Santa Ana714-836-2892
Santa Rosa707-565-5463
Ventura805-383-6454 |
State
Facts
Population: 36,132,147
State Prison Population: 166,556
Probation Population: 384,852
Violent Crime Rate
National Ranking: 10 |
2006
Federal Drug Seizures
Cocaine: 8,071.9 kgs.
Heroin: 331.4 kgs.
Methamphetamine: 2,067.3 kgs./5,014
du
Marijuana: 161,358.1 kgs./15,119
du
Hashish: 1.5 kgs
MDMA: 12.0 kgs/221,976 du
Meth
Lab Incidents: 353
(DEA, state,
and local) |
Drug
Situation: Due to California’s diverse culture
and unique geography, there are many issues that affect the drug
situation in California. Drugs such as cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine,
and marijuana are smuggled into the state from Mexico; however,
methamphetamine and marijuana are produced or cultivated in large
quantities within the state. San Diego and Imperial Counties
remain a principal transshipment zone for a variety of drugs – cocaine,
heroin, marijuana and methamphetamine – smuggled from Mexico.
Most drug traffickers/organizations that are encountered by law
enforcement continue to be polydrug traffickers rather than specializing
in one type of drug. Since September 11, 2001, greater emphasis
has been placed on carefully screening people and vehicles at
all California Ports of Entry into the U.S. from Mexico. This
has forced traffickers to attempt other means to smuggle their
contraband into the U.S., including the use of tunnels that run
underneath the border and more sophisticated hidden compartments
in vehicles. Los Angeles is a distribution center for all types
of illicit drugs destined for other major metropolitan areas
throughout the U.S. as well as locally. Increased security measures
at Los Angeles International Airport continue to deter drug traffickers
from traveling through the airport. Although the northern half
of California is awash in methamphetamine in more rural areas,
heroin remains the number one drug of abuse in San Francisco,
heroin and crack cocaine continue to impact Oakland, and methamphetamine
continues in and around Sacramento.
Cocaine: Mexican
trafficking organizations, working closely with Colombian suppliers,
dominate the wholesale cocaine trade. However, the Mexican traffickers
continue to specialize in cross-border cocaine transportation by
air, land and sea. Based on consistent seizures by U.S. Customs personnel
(BICE), the majority of the cocaine destined for the U.S. continues
to enter the country by land conveyance through the Ports of Entry
along the California/Mexico border. Typically, traffickers transport
the cocaine to Los Angeles in vehicles with hidden compartments and
then offload the cocaine into stash houses. Cocaine is readily available
throughout the state with Los Angeles remaining one of the nation’s
largest cocaine transshipment and distribution centers. Cocaine is
also widely available in San Francisco and other areas of northern
California.
Heroin: California-based
law enforcement agencies primarily seize Mexico black tar heroin
throughout the state and Mexican brown tar heroin to a lesser extent.
Mexican black tar heroin is usually smuggled into the U.S. in amounts
of five pounds or less, but occasionally law enforcement seizes larger
amounts. In addition, Southeast Asian, Southwest Asian, and Colombian
heroin seizures periodically occur throughout the state. The increased
availability of high purity heroin that can be snorted allows a new,
younger population to use heroin without a syringe and needle. Drug
treatment specialists stated that these new heroin users ingest large
amounts of heroin and become quickly addicted. Law enforcement officials
normally encounter ethnic West African and Southeast Asian nationals
in the distribution and transportation of Asian heroin. California
does not have any noticeable heroin abuse in its Asian communities.
Reports that high purity Colombian heroin is now available in the
counties surrounding Los Angeles is supported by the recent seizure
of 200 grams of Colombian heroin by law enforcement in Ventura County.

Methamphetamine: Methamphetamine
is the primary drug threat in California. Mexican organizations continue
to dominate the production and distribution of high-quality meth,
while a secondary trafficking group, composed primarily of Caucasians,
operates small, unsophisticated laboratories. Clandestine laboratories
can be found in any location: high density residential neighborhoods,
sparsely populated rural areas, remote desert locations in the southern
portions of California, and the forested areas in northern California.
In recent years, there has been a decrease in the number of meth
labs seized in California and an increase in the number of meth labs
just south of the border in Mexico. Rural areas in the Central Valley
are the source of much of the meth produced in California and seized
elsewhere. Regardless, there has not been a decrease in the availability
of methamphetamine originating from (or transshipped through) California
and seized elsewhere in the U.S. Within California itself, Hispanics
and Caucasians are the almost exclusive consumers of meth. Purity
levels of meth have ranged from a low of ten percent to a high of
100 percent purity. As the supply of pseudoephedrine from Canada
has diminished after successful law enforcement operations, there
has been a noticeable increase in pseudoephedrine and ephedrine seized
that originated from China.
Club
Drugs: Although MDMA or Ecstasy was considered
the most popular “club drug” in the state among
teens and young adults, there are indicators that its use may
be decreasing across the board, yet consistently available
in geographical pockets. First, the Partnership for a Drug
Free America conducted a study released in 2004 which stated
the use of Ecstasy among teenagers “had dropped 25 percent
in the last two years, (that) decrease translates into an additional
770,000 teens rejecting the once trendy drug.” Although
law enforcement targeted rave promoters in the San Diego county
area a number of years ago, which resulted in their inability
to hold such events and thereby decreased the possibility for
distribution of Ecstasy through that channel, Ecstasy is widely
available for sale in large quantities in San Diego once again.
MDMA is often obtained through suppliers based in Los Angeles,
or on the Internet. Recent
studies indicate that use of MDMA is expanding from raves and
clubs into schools, malls and residences. Although Israeli
and Russian organized crime still dominate the importation
and distribution of MDMA, primarily from the Netherlands, new
poly-drug trafficking organizations are also emerging. Specifically,
Asian groups that are producing MDMA in Canada and Vietnam
and smuggling the drug into California have recently been encountered
by law enforcement. MDMA is widely available in Los Angeles,
which is one of three major gateway cities for the influx of
MDMA into the U.S. (Miami and New York are the other two cities).
Compton (near Los Angeles) remains a primary source of PCP
throughout the U.S. Street gangs continue to control both production
and distribution of PCP. Though not as widely popular as most
rave drugs, LSD remains readily available throughout the Los
Angeles area. The ample supply of LSD is due to the number
LSD laboratories operating in remote areas of Northern California,
which has been the center of LSD production since the 1960’s.
Internet sales of GHB and GBL persist.
Prescription
Drugs: Due
to the discrepancy in national laws between the U.S. and Mexico
the prolific “border pharmacies” within walking distance
across the border in Tijuana and other Mexican border towns continues
to be a major source of controlled substances in the San Diego
metropolitan area. Another is the Internet, which has greatly facilitated
the smuggling of illicit pharmaceuticals into the U.S. through
Tijuana-based distributors. Doctor shopping and prescription forgery
are the primary methods of prescription drug abuse in the Los Angeles
and San Francisco metropolitan areas. In Northern California, OxyContin,
Vicodin, benzodiazepines and carisoprodol are most commonly abused.
In the Los Angeles area, Demerol, Dilaudid, Diazepam, Hydrocodone
and steroids remain the principal drugs abused. The San Diego area
prescription drugs of choice are Vicodin, VicodinES, Lortab, and
Vicoprofen, along with anabolic steroids. Rohypnol remains readily
available throughout the Los Angeles area, due primarily to the
city’s proximity to Mexico.
Marijuana: Marijuana
remains the most widely available and abused illicit substance in
California. Large quantities of low-grade marijuana are smuggled
into the state from Mexico. Highly potent Canadian marijuana, commonly
referred to as “BC bud” is also smuggled into the state.
Potent domestic marijuana is also cultivated in sophisticated indoor,
hydroponic gardens throughout the state.
Crack: Los
Angeles based gangs dominate the street level distribution of crack
cocaine throughout the Los Angeles and San Diego metropolitan areas.
Cocaine bought by the gangs is “rocked” or converted
into crack cocaine in the Los Angeles area (including Santa Ana and
Riverside) and then sold locally or distributed to other cities in
California and nationally. These organizations frequently use intimidation
and violence to facilitate their narcotics trafficking activities.
Gang members involved in the street distribution of crack are often
armed and have a propensity towards violence against other gang members
whom they feel are invading their areas of control.
Pharmaceutical
Diversion: Current
investigations indicate that diversion of hydrocodone products
such as Vicodin®, and oxycodone products such as OxyContin®,
continues to be a problem in California. Primary methods of diversion
being reported are illegal sale and distribution by health care
professionals and workers, “doctor shopping”(going
to a number of doctors to obtain prescriptions for a controlled
pharmaceutical), forged prescriptions, employee theft, pharmacy
and in-transit theft, and the Internet. Fentanyl (such as Actiq®),
benzodiazepines (such as Valium®, diazepam and clonazepam),
and codeine were also identified as being among the most commonly
abused and diverted pharmaceuticals in California.

Other
Drugs: Vicodin,
Ritalin, Rohypnol, Ketamine, and Valium are commonly diverted pharmaceutical
narcotics. Many of these narcotics are used by teens and young
adults frequenting the club scene. Rohypnol is available without
a prescription at pharmacies throughout Mexico. The Los Angeles
area, specifically Compton, California, is the primary source for
the majority of PCP found in the United States. Consequently, PCP
remains readily available.
DEA
Mobile Enforcement Teams: This
cooperative program with state and local law enforcement counterparts
was conceived in 1995 in response to the overwhelming problem of
drug-related violent crime in towns and cities across the nation.
Since the inception of the MET Program, 473 deployments have been
completed nationwide, resulting in 19,643 arrests. There are three
DEA Division offices in California: Los Angeles, San Diego, and
San Francisco. Combined, these three divisions have completed 76
MET deployments throughout the State of California since the inception
of the program. These cities are: San Luis Obispo (2), Oxnard/Ventura,
Gardena, Century, Rampart (2), Antelope Valley, El Monte, Santa
Maria, Quad Cities in Los Angeles, Coachella Valley, Wilshire,
Pico Rivera, Hawthorne, Inglewood, Santa Paula, Hollenbeck, Devonshire,
Ontario, Pasadena, Baldwin Park, Bell Gardens, Garden Grove, Oceanside
(2), El Cajon, Chula Vista, National City (2), Vista, San Diego
(3), La Mesa, Escondido (2), San Marcos, Spring Valley, Richmond
(2), Vallejo (2), Seaside (2), Merced (3), Modesto, Oakland (2),
West Contra Costa County, Eastern Kern County, Yuba County, San
Jose, Stanislaus County, Woodland (2), Salinas, Santa Cruz (2),
Monterey, Sacramento (2), South Bureau LAPD, Corona, Azusa, Yolo
County, Compton, Fontana, Skyline District, Santa Rosa, East Palo
Alto, Long Beach, LAPD/Newton, and Colton. In March 2005, the METs
prioritized investigations to target and dismantle methamphetamine
trafficking organizations and clandestine laboratory operators.
The following 12 MET deployments targeted methamphetamine trafficking
organizations: Corona, Azusa, Fontana, Escondido, Colton, Skyline
District, East Palo Alto, Richmond, Merced (2), Yolo County, and
Vallejo.
DEA
Regional Enforcement Teams: This
program was designed to augment existing DEA division resources
by targeting drug organizations operating in the United States
where there is a lack of sufficient local drug law enforcement.
This Program was conceived in 1999 in response to the threat posed
by drug trafficking organizations that have established networks
of cells to conduct drug trafficking operations in smaller, non-traditional
trafficking locations in the United States. As of January 31, 2005,
there have been 27 deployments nationwide, and one deployment in
the U.S. Virgin Islands, resulting in 671 arrests. There have been
four RET deployments in the State of California since the inception
of the program: Hayward, San Francisco (2 Phases), Riverside/Santa
Ana, and San Jose.
More information
about the San Diego, Los
Angeles, and San Francisco Division
Offices.
Sources
Factsheet
last
updated:
6/2007