Drug Smuggling Quotes
Quotes tagged as "drug-smuggling"
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“The Corrupt Officer has a Price and the Honest Officer has Integrity”
― Corruption Behind Bars: Stories of Crime and Corruption In Our American Prison System
― Corruption Behind Bars: Stories of Crime and Corruption In Our American Prison System
“[T]he two main sources of heroin in
America since World War II—the so-called "Golden Triangle" in Southeast Asia and
the "French Connection" in Marseilles—were established in the course of operations by
the U.S. Government's intelligence community. They have been protected by that
community, ostensibly to further national security. A newer and more diffuse source of
drugs, in Latin America, has often been protected similarly.”
― The Crimes of Patriots: A True Tale of Dope, Dirty Money and the CIA
America since World War II—the so-called "Golden Triangle" in Southeast Asia and
the "French Connection" in Marseilles—were established in the course of operations by
the U.S. Government's intelligence community. They have been protected by that
community, ostensibly to further national security. A newer and more diffuse source of
drugs, in Latin America, has often been protected similarly.”
― The Crimes of Patriots: A True Tale of Dope, Dirty Money and the CIA
“As drugs flow up into the United States, all kinds of people make money off them. People are subcontracted to ship, truck, warehouse, and finally smuggle the product over the border. To complicate this, drugs are often bought and sold many times on their journey. People actually handling these narcotics will often have no knowledge which so-called kingpin or cartel ever owned them, only knowing the direct contacts they are dealing with. Ask a New York cocaine dealer who smuggled his product into America. He would rarely have a clue.
All this helps explain why the Mexican drug trade is such a confusing web, which confounds both journalists and drug agents. Tracing exactly who touched a shipment on its entire journey is a hard task. But this dynamic, moving industry has a solid center of gravity—turfs, or plazas. Drugs have to pass through a certain territory on the border to get into the United States, and whoever is running those plazas makes sure to tax everything that moves. The border plazas have thus become a choke point that is not seen in other drug-producing nations such as Colombia, Afghanistan, or Morocco. This is one of the key reasons why Mexican turf wars have become so bloody.
The vast profits attract all kinds to the Mexican drug trade: peasant farmers, slum teenagers, students, teachers, businessmen, idle rich kids, and countless others. It is often pointed out that in poor countries people turn to the drug trade in desperation. That is true. But plenty of middle-class or wealthy people also dabble. Growing up in the south of England, I knew dozens of people who moved and sold drugs, from private-school boys to kids from council estates (projects). The United States has never had a shortage of its own citizens willing to transport and sell drugs. The bottom line is that drugs are good money even to wealthy people, and plenty have no moral dilemmas about the business.”
― El Narco: Inside Mexico's Criminal Insurgency
All this helps explain why the Mexican drug trade is such a confusing web, which confounds both journalists and drug agents. Tracing exactly who touched a shipment on its entire journey is a hard task. But this dynamic, moving industry has a solid center of gravity—turfs, or plazas. Drugs have to pass through a certain territory on the border to get into the United States, and whoever is running those plazas makes sure to tax everything that moves. The border plazas have thus become a choke point that is not seen in other drug-producing nations such as Colombia, Afghanistan, or Morocco. This is one of the key reasons why Mexican turf wars have become so bloody.
The vast profits attract all kinds to the Mexican drug trade: peasant farmers, slum teenagers, students, teachers, businessmen, idle rich kids, and countless others. It is often pointed out that in poor countries people turn to the drug trade in desperation. That is true. But plenty of middle-class or wealthy people also dabble. Growing up in the south of England, I knew dozens of people who moved and sold drugs, from private-school boys to kids from council estates (projects). The United States has never had a shortage of its own citizens willing to transport and sell drugs. The bottom line is that drugs are good money even to wealthy people, and plenty have no moral dilemmas about the business.”
― El Narco: Inside Mexico's Criminal Insurgency
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