DEA
Offices & Telephone Nos.
Cape Girardeau575-334-1534
Jefferson City—573-635-1331
Kansas City913-825-4100
Springfield417-831-3948
St. Louis314-538-4600 |
State
Facts
Population: 5,800,310
State Prison Population: 31,081
Probation Population: 53,832
Violent Crime Rate
National Ranking: 16 |
2006
Federal Drug Seizures
Cocaine: 615.3 kgs.
Heroin: 11.9 kgs.
Methamphetamine: 41.8 kgs.
Marijuana: 1,834.5 kgs./3 du
Hashish: 0.0 kgs
MDMA: 0.0 kgs/1,182 du
Meth
Lab Incidents: 1,288
(DEA, state, and local) |
Drug
Situation: Mexican
poly-drug trafficking organizations control a large majority
of the distribution of methamphetamine, cocaine, marijuana, and
heroin in Missouri. Various organizations with ties to Texas,
Arizona and California continue to traffic in cocaine and heroin.
In addition, small toxic methamphetamine laboratories are found
in all areas of Missouri.
Cocaine: Cocaine
remains readily available throughout the St. Louis area and is abused
by all social and ethnic groups. Much of the cocaine is converted
to crack and sold in the inner-city areas. Cocaine typically comes
from sources of supply in Texas and California that are associated
with Mexican international distribution organizations. Both cocaine
HCl and crack cocaine are readily available in the Kansas City Metropolitan
area. Hispanic traffickers control the wholesale distribution of
cocaine, while many ethnic groups participate in retail level distribution.
Heroin: The
evolving heroin situation in the St. Louis area, particularly the
growing availability of higher-purity white heroin has become a significant
concern to drug law enforcement in the area. Although Mexican black-tar
heroin continues to be the most readily available type of heroin
found in St. Louis, the higher-purity white heroin is encountered
with increasing frequency. While low purity, Mexican black-tar heroin
dominates the market, some high purity (64% and 69%) Mexican black-tar
heroin has been noted in the recent past.The availability
of heroin in Missouri outside of Saint Louis and Kansas City remains
very limited.
Some interdictions
of larger quantities of South American white heroin have occurred
in the past year. In each instance, the heroin was believed to be
enroute to Chicago, Illinois.

Methamphetamine: Methamphetamine
is widely available throughout Missouri, particularly in the rural
areas. It is either manufactured locally or smuggled into the state
by Hispanic organizations based in Mexico or the southwest United
States and distributed in St. Louis, Kansas City and southeast Missouri.
Methamphetamine smuggled into the state is generally of lower purity
than methamphetamine than is locally manufactured, although encounters
of higher purity “ice” methamphetamine from originating
from outside Missouri have increased. In 2004, Missouri passed legislation
restricting the sale of products containing pseudoephedrine, resulting
in a dramatic decrease in the number of methamphetamine labs in Missouri.
Predatory
Drugs: MDMA (ecstasy) continues to be available
St. Louis, Kansas City and southeast and southwest Missouri.
MDMA and GHB are widely available in dance clubs. MDMA is obtained
by local distributors from sources of supply in California,
New York, Florida, Texas and Washington state.
Marijuana: Marijuana
is prevalent throughout the state Missouri. Mexican marijuana is
imported into the state primarily on interstate highways in automobiles,
commercial trucks, vans, horse trailers, rental trucks, and motor
homes from the southwest border. There has also been an increasing
availability of marijuana from Canada and the northwest United States.
Indoor marijuana
grow operations are found in the St. Louis and Kansas City areas.
Outdoor grow operations are found in the rural parts of the state.
Other
Drugs: OxyContin
continues to be the pharmaceutical drug of choice in the St. Louis
area. It is favored by it’s users over street drugs such
as heroin due to the consistent purity and quality. Law enforcement
and treatment professionals report that the abuse of pharmaceutical
drugs continue to be a major problem throughout the states of the
St. Louis Division. After OxyContin, all of the states cite Hydrocodone
products as the most commonly abused pharmaceutical substance.
The most common methods for obtaining these substances continue
to be doctor shopping, prescription forgeries, pharmacy break-ins,
employee theft, and internet pharmacy websites.
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 Missouri. Primary methods of diversion being reported
are forged prescriptions, employee theft, pharmacy theft, 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), and the Internet. Alprazolam,
methadone, codeine, Adderall® and Ritalin® were also
identified as being among the most commonly abused and diverted
pharmaceuticals in Missouri.
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 have been
11 MET deployments in the State of Missouri since the inception
of the program: Sikeston, Fountain Park, St. Charles County, Audrain
County, Crystal City, Berkeley, Hannibal, Franklin County (2),
Joplin, and Springfield.
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 has been
one RET deployment in the state of Missouri since the inception
of the program, in Springfield/Joplin.
Special
Topics: The
St. Louis Homicide Initiative was created by DEA St. Louis and
the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department to address and combat
the city's increase in drug related homicides. The objectives of
this initiative are to identify violent organizations involved
in drug trafficking activity and to develop investigative leads
by use of court authorized telephone intercepts to clear unsolved
homicides and related crimes. Missouri is crossed by a number of
interstate highways (Interstates 44, 64, and 70 from east to west;
35 and 55 from north to south), providing excellent smuggling routes
for drug trafficking organizations. During 2004, highway interdictions
in Missouri led to seizures including approximately 500 kilograms
of cocaine, 950 grams of heroin, 16,400 pounds of marijuana, 9
pounds of methamphetamine HCl, 3.5 pounds of crystal methamphetamine,
48 ounces of PCP, 500 dosage units of LSD, 50 pounds of psilocybin
mushrooms, and over $3.5 million dollars.
More information
about the St. Louis Division Office.
Sources
Factsheet
last
updated:
6/2007